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THE  UNIVERSITY  LIBRARY 

UNIVERSIIY  OF  CaLIFORiNOA.  SAN  DiEG(k 

LA  JOLLA,  CALIFORNIA 


U.S,    LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 


SELECT  LIST  OF  BOOKS 

(WITH  REFERENCES  TO  PERIODICALS) 


RELATING   TO  THE 


WJ^  R      EAST 


COMPILED  UNDER  THE  DIRECTION  OF 

APPLETON  PRENTISS  CLARK  GRIFFIN 

CHIEF  BIBLIOGRAPHER 


S50S72 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT    PRINTING    OFFICE 

1904 


SAN  JOSE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
SAN  JOSE.  CALIFORNIA 


PREFATORY  NOTE 


This  List  deals  with  the  later  conditions  in  the  Far  East.  The  politi- 
cal and  economic  aspects  are  the  special  subjects  dealt  with.  For 
convenience  of  consultation  the  titles  are  arranged  under  the  followinj^ 
subdivisions:  Russia;  .Histor}-,  politics,  etc.;  Russian  expansion:  Trans- 
Siberian  railroad;  Tibet;  Manchuria;  Japan;  Korea;  Russo-Japanese- 
relations;  Far  East:  American  relations;  Far  East:  European  relations; 
Anglo-Russian  relations;  and  China. 

History  of  Urns ia. — A  compendium  of  Russian  history  is  Mortiirs 
"A  history  of  Russia  from  the  birth  of  Peter  the  Great  to  Nicholas  II.'' 
Rambaud's  "The  history  of  Russia"  is  a  work  of  greater  extent,  the 
later  editions  bring  the  history  down  to  1904.  In  Wallace's  "Russia'' 
the  histor}-  stops  at  1877. 

Recent  works  in  English  on  the  Internal  affairs  of  Russia  »,v&  Briig- 
gen's  "Russia  of  to-day;"  Drage's  "Russian  affairs;"  Latimer's 
"Russia  and  Turkey  in  the  nineteenth  century;"  Leroy-Beaulieu's 
"The  empire  of  the  tsars  and  the  Russians;"  Palmer's  "Russian  life 
in  town  and  country;"  and  Schierbrand's  "Russia,  her  strength  and  her 
weakness."  The  volumes  issued  by  the  Russian  government  in  con- 
nection with  the  World's  Columbian  exposition  contain  mucli  statis- 
tical information.  Works  in  foreign  languages  to  be  specially  noted 
are:  Anspach's  "La  Russie  economique  et  I'ceuvre  de  M.  de  Witte;" 
Briiggen's  "Das  heutige  Russland;'"  Danielson's  "Histoire  du  devel- 
oppement  economique  de  la  Russie  depuis  I'affranchissement  des 
serfs;"  Delage's  "Chez  les  Russes;"  Deschamps's  "La  Russie  au  20™' 
siecle;''  Kovalevskii's  "La  Russie  a  la  fin  du  IH"  siecle:"  Kupchauko's 
"Russland  in  Zahlen;"  Machat's  "Lc  developpcment  economique  de 
la  Russie;"  Niet's  "La  Russie  d'aujourd'hui"  and  Straimik's  "La 
pensee  russe  contemporaine." 

Russian  nanj. — Clarke's  "Russia's  sea-power,  past  and  present;  or, 
The  riseof  the  Russian  navy"  and  Jane's  "The  imperial  Russian  navy; 
its  past,  present,  and  future." 

Rnssiaii  expansion. — Rambaud's  "The  expansion  of  Russia''  is  a 
valuable  economic  study.  Skriue's  " The  expansion  of  Russia.  1815- 
19U0"  is  a  sympathetic  record  down  to  1900;  Norman's  "All  the 
Russias"  inclines  to  look  with  favor  on  Russian  policies;  Beveridge's 


4  PREFATORY    NOTK 

"The  Russian  advaiict'"  is  tlu>  result  of  a  study  of  conditions  made  in 
a  \  i-.it  ill  i'.'iil  and  is  coniiiieridatorv  of  Russia;  Chirol's  "The  middle 
eastern  ([uestion"  i-oiisidei-s  pliases  of  Russian  expansion  witli  special 
regard  to  Russian  relations  witli  Afj;lianistan.  Persia  and  'ril)et,  and 
to  the  position  of  tiie  Indian  empire;  (ieri-are"s  •"Greater  Russia"  is 
written  with  tlie  ol)ject  of  convevin;;'  "an  adecjuate  idea  of  Russia's 
advance:  lier  industrial  progress.  couuniM-cial  prospects,  the  openings 
presented  foi'  Iioth  capital  and  lal)()ur.  tlie  markets  closed  to  foreign 
enterprise."  G.  Frederick  Wright  in  his  work  (Mititled  "Asiatic  Rus- 
sia" lioids  that  "except  in  tlie  case  of  the  United  States,  no  other 
nation  of  tlie  world  has  before  it  the  cleai'  field  for  expansion  that 
Russia  has  in  her  Asiatic  possessions,  and  no  other  nation  has  more 
completely  at  her  command  the  material  and  moral  i-esourccs  of  mod- 
ern science  and  Christian  civilization  than  she  has,  if  she  but  continues 
to  use  them  rightly."  Krahmer's  "Russland  in  Asien"  is  a  d(>tailed 
history  in  six  volumes,  of  which  a  single  volume  is  devoted  to  a  special 
phase  of  Russian  activities  in  the  Far  East. 

Tritiix-Sihei'iiiii  railii'dy. — There  are  iiumei'ous  travellers"  accounts 
including  Car3''s  "The  Trans-Siberian  route;  or,  Notes  of  a  journey 
from  Pekin  to  New  York  in  1902;"  Lynch's  "The  path  of  empire;" 
Shoemaker's  "The  great  Silierian  I'aihvay  from  St.  Petei'sburg  to 
Pekin;"  Simpson's  "Side-lights  on  Siberia.  Some  at'counts  of  the 
great  Siberian  railroad,  the  prisons  and  the  exile  systems;"  Vladimir's 
"Russia  on  the  Pacific,  and  the  Silierian  railway"  and  others  in  the 
articles  in  j)eriodicals  noted  on  pp.  ll'-21  of  this  List.  The  sumptuous 
volume  printed  by  the  Russian  Ministry  of  ways  of  communication, 
printed  in  English  under  the  title  "Guide  to  the  Great  Siberian  rail- 
way" is  to  be  specially  noted.  The  account  published  by  the  United 
States  Bureau  of  statistics  in  its  Monthly  summary  of  commerce  and 
finance,  April,  1899,  contains  valuable  material. 

2[aii(Jiuria. — Hosie's  "Manchuria:  its  people,  resources  and  his- 
tory" is  a  good  first  hand  authority.  Whigham's  "^Manchuria  and 
Korea"  is  a  study  of  political  and  economic  conditions  as  well  as 
descriptive. 

Hlstm^y  of  Japan . — Recent  works  are  Brinkley's  '"Japan;  its  history, 
arts  and  literature;"  Diosy's  "The  new  Far  East;"  Griffis's  "The 
Mikado's  empire.  10th  ed.,  including  history  to  beginning  of  1903;" 
Gulick's  "  Evolution  of  the  Japanese,  social  and  psychic;"  Koch's 
"Japan.  Geschichte  nach  japanischen  Quellen  und  ethnographischen 
Skizzen;"  Murray's  "The  story  of  Japan"  and  Ransome's  '"Japan  in 
transition."  A  history  of  Japan  in  restricted  compass  is  given  in  the 
second  volume  of  Helmolt's  '"The  world's  history,  a  survey  of  man's 
record." 

The  recent  descriptive  vx>rks  are: — Brinkley's  "Japan:  its  history, 
arts  and  literature"  and  the  v       me  he  has  edited  entitled   ""Japan; 


PREFATORY    NOTE  5 

described  and  illustrated  by  the  Japanese;  written  by  eminent  Japanese 
authorities  and  scholars;"  Browne's  "Japan;  the  place  and  the  people;" 
BrownplTs  "The  heart  of  Japan;"  Chamberlain's  "Things  Japanese" 
and  the  guide  written  with  W.  B.  Mason  entitled  "A  handbook  for 
travellers  in  Japan;"  Dumolard's  "Le  Japon  politique,  economique, 
et  social";  Scherer's  "Japan  today;"  Singleton's  "Japan  as  seen  and 
described  by  famous  writers;"  Sladen's  "Queer  things  about  Japan;" 
Gilbert  Watson's  "Three  rolling  stones  in  Japan''  and  W.  Petrie 
Watson's  "Japan;  aspects  &  destinies.'' 

The  Japanese  navy. — F.  T.  Jane's  "The  imperial  Japanese  navy  "  is 
similar  in  scope  to  his  book  on  the  Russian  navy  and  is  of  likewise 
timely  value. 

Japanese  art  is  treated  in  Anderson's  "The  pictorial  arts  of  Japan;" 
Brinkley's  "The  art  of  Japan"  and  his  "Japan;  described  and  illus- 
trated by  the  Japanese;  written  \>j  eminent  Japanese  authorities  and 
scholars;  with  an  essay  on  Japanese  art  by  Kaluzo  Okakura;"  Okak- 
ura's  "The  ideals  of  tiie  East,  with  special  reference  to  the  art  of 
Japan;"  and  Rein's  "The  industries  of  Japan.  Together  with  an 
account  of  its  agriculture,  forestry,  arts,  and  commerce." 

Korea. — Hamilton's  "Korea"  is  to  be  noted  as  a  comprehensive 
account  giving  results  of  recent  observations.  Underwood's  "Fifteen 
years  among  the  top-knots;  or,  Life  in  Korea"  gives  a  picture  of  mis- 
sionary life  in  Korea. 

The  literature  consisting  of  magazine  articles  on  the  present  war  is 
noted  under  the  heading  Russo-Japanese  relations  on  pp.  40— ±S  of  this 
List. 

A  selection  of  titles  relating  to  the  political  Intei'ests  of  the  United 
States  in  the  Far  East  is  given  on  pp.  49-52  of  this  List.  It  includes 
some  works  dealing  with  the  first  appearance  of  Americans  in  Asiatic 
countries  and  the  history-  of  their  participation  in  Far  Eastern  affairs. 
In  the  section  devoted  to  Anglo-Russian  relations  are  noted  works 
dealing  with  the  Russian  advance  in  Central  Asia  and  its  effects  upon 
English  interests. 

Hi-itory  of  China. ^Xn  extensive  work  is  Boulger's  "The  history 
of  China,''  first  published  in  1881-1884,  and  revised  editions  in  1898 
and  1900,  respectively.  Its  chief  value  lies  in  its  detailed  account  of 
"European  progress  in  China  subsequent  to  the  signing  of  the  treaty 
of  Nankin  in  1842,  including  the  Taeping  rebellion  in  all  its  phases 
and  Gordon's  campaign."  The  earlier  part  of  his  history  is  drawn 
mainh'  from  the  Jesuit  epitomes  of  the  Chinese  annalists.  The  new 
edition  of  his  "Short  History"  has  an  additional  chapter,  written  by 
another  hand,  giving  a  summary  account  of  the  reign  of  Kwaug  Su, 
coveinng  the  capture  of  Pekin. 

Douglas's  "China",  forming  a  volume  of  the  "Story  of  the  nations 
series"  gives  all  that  the  general  reader  needs.     In  Macgowan's  "A 


b  PREFATORY    N<;)TE 

history  of  China  from  the  earliest  days  down  to  the  present"  recourse 
has  been  had  to  the  original  authorities.  "'It  is  not  a  conipilation 
giithered  from  all  sources,  but  a  reproduction  from  the  orij^inal  of  the 
Standard  Plistorj-  of  China."  Williams'.s  "The  middle  kingdom"  first 
published  in  184>i,  constituted  for  a  long  time  the  principal  source 
of  information  for  English  readers,  and  in  its  revised  form  is  still 
regarded  as  a  cla.ssic.  Brinkley's  "China;  its  history,  arts  and  litera- 
ture" is  of  very  great  value.  T\\<i  l(it>-r  hixU/ry  nf  Chinn  is  dealt  with, 
among  others,  by  Heals,  Colquhoun,  Favier,  Hart,  Krausse,  Landor. 
Leroy-Beaulieu,  Lynch,  Mitford,  Norman,  Thom.son,  Wen  Ching  and 
Wilson. 

China. — Political  and  eccmomic  cwiditionM  are  discussed  in  works  by 
Bard,  Beresford,  Brandt,  Brenier,  Colquhoun,  Gorst,  Krausse,  Leroj'- 
Beaulieu,  Nelson.  Parker.  Parsons,  Pinon.  and  Wilson.  Set'  aJuo 
"Commercial  China  in  19n4"  published  by  the  United  StJites  Bureau 
of  statistics. 

For  the  foreign  vhitionx  of  China  there  are  to  be  noted  Cordier's 
"Histoire  des  relations  de  la  Chine  avec  les  puissances  occidentales 
1860-1900,"  and  Ireland's  "China and  the  powers;  chapters  in  the  his 
tory  of  Chinese  intercourse  with  western  nations." 

The  xocifd  lifeoi  China  can  be  studied  in  Douglas's  "Society  in 
China;"  Hesse-Wartegg's  "China  und  Japan;"  Little's  "Intimate 
China;"  Smith's  "Chinese  characteristics"  and  his  "Village  life  in 
China." 

Travel  in  CJdna. — Recent  works  are  Bishop's  "The  Yangtze  Valley 
and  >)eyond;"  Cumming's  "Wanderings  in  China;"  Jack's  "The  back 
blocks  of  China;"  Little's  "Through  the  Yang-tse  gorges:"  Scidniore's 
"China"  and  Thomson's  "Through  China  with  a  camera."  ' 

Miniiimii  ill  China. — For  this  subject  see  works  by  Barrows.  Edkins. 
Gundry  and  Michie. 

Chinese  Mbliography. — Cordier's  "Bibliothecasinica.  Dictionnaire 
bibliographique  des  ouvrages  relatifs  a  I'Empire  chinois,"  is  a  monu- 
mental work. 

A.  P.  C.  Griffin 
Chief  Bibliographer 

Herbert  Putnam 

L'i}/rarian  of  Congress 

Washington,  D.  C,  July  i,  190 li. 


SELECT  LIST  OF  BOOKS  (WITH  REFERENCES  TO  PERIODICALS) 
RELATING  TO  THE  FAR  EAST 


RUSSIA:  HISTORY,  POLITICS,  ETC. 

(See  also  Russians  Expansion,  pp.  12-16  of  this  list.) 

Anspach,  Alfred.     La  Russie  economique  et  I'ceuvre  de  M.  de  Witte,  avec  introduc- 
tion par  Ch.  de  Lariviere. 
Paris:  11.  I.e  Soudier,  1904.      [4],  .tTiii,  S94 pp.     Portrait.     12°. 

.\ppendix:  La  Russie  et  la  Perse  au  point  de  nie  commercial.    Fragment  d'un  dis- 

cours  de  SI.  de  Witte. 
Contains  chapters  on  de  Witte.  railroads,  emigration  in  Siberia,  the  frontier  guard, 
the  merchant  marine,  monetary  reform,  credit,  public  debt,  bridges,  etc.,  showing 
results  which  de  Witte  has  achieved. 

Brandes,  Georg  Morris  Cohen.     Impressions  of  Rus.iia.     Translated  from  the  Dan- 
ish by  Samuel  C.  Eastman. 
Neui  Yml:  T.  Y.  Crmvett&co.,  [7**9].     x,  353  pp.     Portrait.     12°. 

Brovniing,  Oscar.     Peter  the  Great. 

London:  Hutrhinjion  and  CO.,  1S9S.     mii,  347 pp.     Portrait.     lg°. 

Briiggen,  Ernst  von  tier.     Das  heutige  Russland;  Kulturstudien. 
Leipzig:    Veil  d- comp.,  190i^.     (6),  276 pp.     8°. 

Contents;  Ausseres  Wachsthum. — Innere  Kampfe. — Finanzen. — Industrie. — Das  Zen- 
triun. — Der  Adel. — Der  Bauer. — Kirche  und  Moral. — Verarmung  und  Hungersnot. — 
Mittelklassen.— Stadtwesen,  Schulen,  RevoUuionare.  Kunst.  Litteratur. — Die  eiu-o- 
paischen  Grenziiinder.— Kolonien  und  Weltmacht.— Die  Landschaftsverfassung.— 
Biireaukratie. — Verfa-s,sungsfragen. 

Russia  of  to-day.     From  the  German,  by  II.  Sandwith. 

London:  Dighy,  Long  li- CO.,  1904.     vii,  306 pp.     8°. 

Bujac,  Jean  Leopold  Emile.     L'arm^e  russe,  son  histoire,  son  organisation  actuelle. 
Paris:  Limoge.*,  H.  Charleg-Larauzelle,  1894.     428pp.     8°. 

Clarke,  Sir  George  Sydenham.     Russia's  sea-power,  past  and  pre.sent;  or,  The  rise  of 
the  Russian  navy. 
London:  J.  Murray,  1898.     xix,  {1),  202  pp.     S  folded  maps.     12°. 
A  new  edition  has  been  published,  and  has  been  ordered  by  the  Library. 

[Daniels]  on,    Xikolal   Frantsovich.     Histoire  du  developpement  economique  de 
la  Russie  depuis  I'affrancliissement  des  serfs,  par  Nicolas-on.     Traduit  de 
russe  par  (ig. 
Paris:   V.  Giard  &  E.  Briere,  1902.     vii,  523  pp.     Tables.     8°. 

Delage,  Emile.     Chez  les  Russes;  Etudes  et  impressions  de  voyage  melees.     Preface 
par  Georges  Montorgueil.     3.  ed. 
Paris:  Dujarrir  et  eie.,  190S.     .r.rir,  410 pp.     12°. 

Contents;  Choses  entrevues;  Chemin  fai^ant  A  travers  la  Pologne, — Choses  vues  et 
v^ues;  .V  Moscou.— Choses  dik'ouvertcs:  Sur  le  Volga  et  alentour,  oreille  tendue  et 
nez  au  vent. — Etudes  annexes;  Lc  commerce  du  \*in  dans  1*  Empire  nisse.  La  pro- 
pri^t^  industrielle  et  litt^rairc  devant  les  pratiques  russes.  Les  foires  de  Nijni- 
Novgorod  de  ce  temps. 

7 


8  LIBRARY     OK    CONGRESS 

Deschamps,  Philippe.     I_4i  Russie  au  20"*  sidcle. 

ParU:  GuiUaumm&  cit.,  1902.     (4),  SS4,  {1)  pp.     8°. 

Drage,  Geoffrey.     Russian  affairs.  * 

London:  John  Murrdy,  1904.     -fri,  7,38 pp.     Folded  maps.     S°. 

Contents:  Introduction;  Russian  nmbitions:  .\Kri(iiltHre;  Agrnriun  development; 
Famine-s;  Industry;  Commerce;  Finiince;  Poland,  Finland,  and  the  Baltic  provinces; 
Dependencies.  A.  Northern  Asia:  Siberia;  Manchuria;  B.  Central  Asia;  Conclu- 
sion: Appendices. 

"  This  is  a  new  and  important  work  on  tlie  present  internal  state  of  Ru.ssia,  derived 
from  personal  acquaintance  with  the  countrj'.  Political  questions  and  the  economic 
problems  connected  with  agriculture,  industry,  commerce  and  finance  in  European 
and  Asiatic  Russia  are  exhaustively  dealt  with,  M.  de  Witte's  budgets  being  care- 
fully analysed."     .Spectator,  Mar.  -Zi'i,  '04. 

Foulke,  William  Duilley.     Slav  or  Saxon,  a  study  of  the  growth  and  tendencies  of 
Russian  civilization.     2(1  ed.,  revLsed. 
Neil-  York:  (J.  P.  Putnam's  sons,  1899.     rii,  (1),  141  pp.     1-'°.     {Questions  of 
the  day,  no.  4-3. ) 

Same.     3d  ed.  rev.  and  enl. 

New  York:  G.  P.  Putnam's  sons,  1904.    U;  (1),  210  pp.    13°.     {Questions  of  the 
day,  no.  4-3. ) 

With  an  additional  chapter  on  the  causes  of  the  war  in  the  Far  East  and  the  issues 

involved. 

Golovin,  Konstaiitin  Fedorovich.     Russlands  Finaiizpolitik  lunl  die  AiUgaben  der 
Zukunft.   .\usdein  Russischen  von  M.  Kolossowski.  Vollstiindigedeutsche 
Ausgabe. 
Leipzig:  Verlag  ran  Otto  Wigand,  1900.     (4),  2.SS pp.     8°. 

Jane,  FriMleriek  T.     The  imperial  Russian  navy ;  it.s  past,  pre.sent,  and  future.     New 
and  revised  edition. 
Jjmdon:   W.  Tharkeni:  co.,  1904.     33,  {1),  2:3-736  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates. 
Portraits.     Maps.     Plans.     Facsimiles.     4°  ■ 

The  author  states  that  in  this  new  edition,  he  hius  "only  laboured  to  bring  the  book 
completely  up  to  date  as  regards  viatlrid  and  personnel,  deleting  in  the  former  mat- 
ter that,  owing  to  changes  in  design  and  so  forth,  is  no  longer  applicable." 

Kovalevskii,  Maksim  Maksimovich.     Le  rc^'giine  ^conomiijue  de  la  Russie. 

Paris:   V.   Giard  &  E.  Brib-e,  1898.      {4),  363,   {3)  pp.     8°.     {Bibliothique 
sociologique  Internationale,  14- ) 

Russian  political  institutions;  the  growth  and  development  of  these  institu- 

tions from  the  Ijeginnings  of  Russian  history  to  the  present  time. 
Chicago:  The  Vnirersity  of  Chicago  press,  1903.     i.c,  399  pp.     Maps.     8°. 

Kovalevskii,  Vladimir  Ivanovieh,  ed.     La  Russie  a  la  fin  dtt  19"  siecle. 

Paris:  P.  Dupoiit,  1900.     xx,  989,  {3)  pp.     Maps.     Tables.     Diagrams.     S°. 
{Commission  imperiale  de  Pus»ie  d  V Exposition  unirerselle  de  P<irix.) 

Kupchanko,  (irigoril  Ivanovieh.     Russland  in  Zahlen.     Statistieches  Sammelwerk. 
Mit  einer  Eisenbahnkarte. 
Leipzig:  0.  Wigand,  1903.     v,  {2),  148  pp.     Mn]>.     8°. 

Anhang  (pp.  135-148):  1.  Gesetzlich  bestimmtcs  Verhiiltnis  zwischen  den  rassischen 
und  den  metri.schen  .Ma.««en  und  Ciewnchten.  2.  Russische  Geldsorten.  3.  Passvor- 
schrilten.    4.  Eisenbahnfahrpreisc. 


SELECT    LIST   OF    BOOKS    ON    RUSSIA 


9 


Iiatimer,  Mary  Elizatjeth  Wormeley.     Russia  and  Turkey  in  the  nineteenth  century. 
Chicago:  A.  C.  McClurg  and  company,  189S.     41S  pp.     Portraits.     8°. 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Anatole.     The  empire  of  the  tsars  and  the  Russian?.     Translated 
from  tlie  third  French  edition,  with  annotations,  l)y  Zt-naide  A.  Ragozin. 
O.  P.  Putmim's  som.  New  York,  London,  1893-1896.     S  rote.     8°. 

Parti.  The  country  and  its  inhabitants:  Part2.  The  in.«titutions;  Parts.  The  religion. 


Lodge,  Henry  Cabot.     Some  impressions  of  Russia. 

(In  his  \  fighting  frigate,  and  other  es.«ajs  and  addresses,  pp.  2.i7-2S0. 

1902.    8°.) 
"  This  article  was  published  in  Scribner's  Magazine  for  April,  1902." 


New  York, 


Machat,  J.     Le  d^veloppement  <^conomique  <le  la  Russie. 

Paris:  A.  Colin,  1902.     .rri,  310,  (4)  pp.     MapK.     Diagram/.     12". 
"Bibliographie":  pp.  xiii-xvi. 

Miliukov,  Pavel  Nikolaevich.     Essais  sur  I'histoire  de  la  civilisation  russe.     Traduit 

du  russe  par  P.  Dramas  &  D.  Soskice.     Avec  une  preface  de  Lucien  Herr. 

Paria:   X.  Ciiard  &  E.  Bri^re,  1901.     riii,  -'S.5,  (^)  pp.     Maps.    Diagram.".     S°. 

Contents:  Introduction — i.  ptie.  La  population — 2.  ptie.  L'evolution  economique — 
3.  ptie.  L'fvolution  de  T^tat — i.  ptie.  La  stmcture  sociale— Conclu-sions — Cartes 
et  diagrammes. 

Morfill,  William  Richard.     A  history  of  Russia  from  the  birth  of  Peter  the  <  ireat  to 
Xieholas  ii. 
Xeir   YorJ::   ./.  Poll  <t-  co.,  190^.     riii,  486  pp.    Frontispiece.     Maps    (partly 
folded).     W. 

The  story  of  Russia. 

.Yfic  York:  G.  P.  Patnam's  sons,  1890.  xix,  (i),  394  pp.  Frontispiece  {por- 
trait). Illustrations.  Portraits.  Folded  maps.  12°.  (The  story  of  the 
nations. ) 


'Niet,  pseud.    La  Russie  d'aujourd'hui.    Le  tsar. — Les  grands-ducs. — Les  ministres. — 
La  soci^te. — Les  finances. — La  police. — L'adniLnistration. — La  diplomatie, 
etc. 
Paris:  F.  Juren,  [1902].     (4),  312  pp.     12°. 

Author's  pseudonym,  "  Xiet,"  at  head  of  title.    "  Une  grande  partie  de  oette  ^tude  a 

paru,  en  fragments  public's  chaque  semaine  A  I'Echo  de  Paris." 
"Ce  livre  trouve  une  aetualit^  brfllante  dans  les  (^venemenls  de  notre  heure:  toutes 
les  phases  du  grand  drame  qui  commence  ont  ^t^  pr*^vues  par  Niet.  si  sinc^rement, 
avec  une  documentation  si  incontestable,  qu'on  a  voulu  lire  bien  des  noms  de 
diplomates  sous  I'anonymat  de  son  auteiu"." 

Palmer,  Francis  H.  E.     Russian  life  in  town  and  coimtry. 

Xew  York  and  London:  G.  P.  Put  nam' s  sous,  1901.     .ri,  (2),  .S20  pp.     Plates. 
12°.     (Our  European  neighhours.) 

Rambaud,  Alfred  Nicolas.     Histoire  de  la  Russie  depuis  les  origines  jusqu'ii  nos 
jours.     5.  ed.  rev.  et  complC*t^e  jusqu'en  1900. 
Pnri.v   Uachette  &  de.,  1900.     (4),  922,  (2)  pp.     Maps.     12°.     (Historie  uni- 
rerselle.) 

"  Xote  bibliographique  "  :  pp.  [897J-914. 

The  history  of  Russia  from  the  earliest  times  to  1877.     Translated  by  Leon- 
ora B.  Lang,  with  additional  chapters  covering  the  period  from  1S77  to 
1904,  by  G.  Mercer  Adam. 
-4.  /..  Burt  company,  publishers.    New  York,   [_1904'\.     ~  vols.     Frontispieces. 
Plates.     Portraits.     12°. 


10  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Bambaud,  Alfred  Nicolas.  A  popular  history  of  Russia  from  the  eailiest  times  to 
1S80.  Translated  by  L.  B.  Lang.  Edite<l  and  enlarged  liy  Xathan  IIa.skell 
Dole.  In<-luding  a  history  of  the  Turko-Russian  war  of  1877-78,  from  the 
best  authorities,  by  the  editor. 
Boiftoii:  D.  EsteK  and  C.  E.  Lauriat,  18S0-188S.  3  vols.  Plates.  Portraits. 
^fflps.     S°. 

Kegelsperger,  Gustave.     Les  Russes  en  Asie. 

( In  Rivuo  universelle,  vol.  2,  Moy  l.i,  1902,  pp.  261-266.) 

Kussia.  AptTou  statistique  des  chemins  de  fer  et  des  voies  na\i},'ablt'.s  de  la  Ru^sie. 
Avec  annexe  de  cartes  et  de  tableaux  graphiques.  Section  de  statistique 
et  de  cartographie  du  Ministere  des  voies  de  communication. 
St.-Pi'lersbourg:  Iinpr.  du  Ministh-e  des  voies  de  rommunicatiou  (./.  \.  Koiich- 
nereff  it  <■'«),  jnOO.  {8),  180  pp.  2  folded  map.i.  *  4  folded  statistical  dia- 
grams.    8°. 

"Rfidigfi  pour  rExposition  universelle  de  1900  A  Puri-')." 


Statesman's  handbook  for  Ruspia.     K<lited  by  the  Chancer)'  of  the  Com- 

mittee of  ministers. 
St.  Petersburg:  E.  Thiele,  1896.     2  vols.     8°. 

Contests:  I.  Preface.  Unity  of  the  Russian  empire.  State  organization.  Riglits  of 
subjects.  State  administration.  Separate  brandies  of  state  administration.  Mate- 
rial resources.— II.  Spiritual  welfare:  1.  Eccle.sia.itical  institutions.  2.  National 
education.  3.  Institutions  of  the  Empress  Mary.  Policy  of  security.  •Justice.  Local 
government  and  self  government.    Appendix:  Races  inhabiting  the  Russian  empire. 

The  industries  of  Russia,  by  the  Department  of  trade  and  manufactures, 

Ministrj-  of  finance  for  the  World's  Columbian  exposition  at  Chicago. 
Editor  of  the  English  translation,  John  Martin  Crawford. 
St.  Petersburg:  [Trenke  &  Fugnot,  printers'\,  189.S.     5  vols,  in  4.     Map.i.     Dia- 
grams.    4°. 

Co.NTENTs:  I-II.  Manufactures  and  trade. — III.  Agriculture  and  forestry. — IV.  Mining 
and  metallurgy. — V.  Siberia  and  the  great  Siberian  railway. 

La  Kussie,  g^ographique,  ethnologiquc,  historique,  administrative,  i^conomique, 
religieuse,  litteraire,  artistique,  scientifique,  pittores(|iie,  etc.  Par  MM.  L. 
Delavaud,  Girard  de  Rialle,  Ch.  Rabot,  Alfred  Rambaud,  Albert  N'andal, 
Maxime  Petit,  G.  Regelsjierger,  Ernest  Lehr,  Anatole  Lero;-Beaulieu, 
Desire  Lecroix,  Arthur  Raffalovich,  G.  Lejeal,  Louis  Leger,  E.  M.  de 
Vogiie,  Maurice  Tourneux,  Maurice  Vachon,  Arthur  Pougin,  J.  Grand- 
Carteret,  Michel  Delines,  >I"'  Lydie  Paschkof,  A.  Andre,  baron  de  Mon- 
talbo,  Camille  Couderc.  3.  t^d. 
Paris:  Larousse,  [7900].  490  pp.  Illustraliotis.  Portraits.  Plans.  Maps 
(partlji  folded).     Folded  fac.<ti  milies.     8°. 

Schierbrand,  Wolf  von.     Russia,  lier  strength  and  her  weakness;  a  study  of  the 
present  condition  of  the  Russian  empire,  with  an  analysis  of  its  resources 
and  a  forecast  of  its  future. 
New    York  and    London:    (i.    P.    Putnam's    sons,    1904.     riv,    (3),  S04  pp. 
Folded  maps.     8°. 

Strannik,  Ivan.     La  pens6e  russe  con  temporal  ne. 

Paris:  A.  Colin,  1903.     (4),  S66,  {2)  pp.     1S°. 

Contents:  Introductioc — L'impuissancede  vivre.  Tch^khov. — L' esprit  de  vagabond- 
age. Gorki. — Le  sentiment  de  la  piti*5.  Korolenko. — Orthodoxie  et  h*M^rodoxie. 
Tolstoi. — L'esprit  sectaire.    Les  Doukhobors. 


SELECT   LIST    OF    BOOKS   ON    RUSSIA  11 

Thompson,  Herbert  M.     Kussiian  politics. 

Xew  York:   H.  Holt  and  conipatii/,   1896.      xi,  (11),  389  pp.     Folded  maps. 

Folded  tnhle.     13°. 

Tikhomirov,  Lev  Aleksandrovich.     Russia,  political  and  social;  translated  from  the 
French  by  Edward  Aveling.     2d  ed. 
Londim:  S.   Sonnemchein  &  co,,   1893.     -.i   vole.     S°.     (Library  of  standard 
authors. ) 

Contents:  I.  The  Russian  empire  and  Russia.  Russian  Russia:  Germans  and  Jews. 
The  social  classes  in  Russia:  the  people;  the  clergy,  nobility,  bourgeoisie.  Eco- 
nomic and  industrial  Russia.— 11.  The  intellectual  movement.  Political  Russia. 
Appendices:  a.  Statistics  of  the  national  revenue.  B.  The  term  nihilists,  c.  Sul>- 
jects  forbidden  by  the  censorship.  D.  Partition  of  the  land.  E.  Works  and  publi- 
cations quoted. 

United  States.     Bureau  o/  statistics.     Commercial  Rus.sia  in  1904.     Area,  popula- 
tion, finances,  currency,  railways,  industry,  and  agriculture,  and  foreign 
commerce  and  commerce  of  the  United  States  with  Russia. 
Washington:  Government  printing  office,  1904.     Hi,  (1),  2755-2869  pp.     Folded 
map.     4°. 

Reprinted  from  the  Monttily  summarj-  of  commerce  and  finance  for  Feb.,  1904. 

Waliszewski,  Kazimierz.     Peter  the  Great.     Translated  from  the  French  by  Lady 
Mary  Loyd. 
Xvw  York:  D.  Appleton  &  company ,  1897.     j;  562  pp.     Portrait.     8°. 

The  romance  of  an  empress,  Catherine  II  of  Russia.     Translated  from  the 

French. 
Xcu-  York:  IK  Appleton  and  compami,  1S94.     viii,  458  pp.     Portrait.     8°. 

The  story  of  a  throne  (Catherine  II  of  Russia).     From  the  French. 

London:   Tl'.  HeinertMnn,  1895.     2  vols.     8°. 

Wallace,  D.  ilackenzie.     Russia. 

Xerr  York:  Henry  Holt  and  company,  1877.     xiii,  (1),  620  pp.    2  folded  maps. 
8°. 


RUSSIAN  EXPANSION 

Aulag'non,  Claudius.     La  SiWrie  ('■conomiquc,  ccinsideri-  plus  sp^cialement  dans  sa 
])artie  cisbaikalienne.     Pi^'face  parM.  Fn'di'ric  Passy. 
Paris:  Guillmimin  et  cif,  1901.    .vii, SSO pp.    Illuxlrations.    Platen.    S°.     {Pub- 
lication de  r Annoriatiori  ilr.<!  rmrinix  i'l!>i'eK  ili'  I'Ecole  den  havtes  eiude.i  commer- 
cialen. ) 

Beveridge,  Albert  Jeremiah.     The  Russian  advaiue. 

New  York  and   Ixmdoti:  Harper  lO   limllnr.i,  190S.     Hi,    (.5),   4S.'>,    {1)     pp. 
Maps.     S°. 

Appendix:  Treaty  of  .^himtmosi'ki,  by  which  southern  Manchuria  \va.s  ceded  to  Japan; 
Mikado's  rescript  withdrawing  from  Mancliuria;  The  (reputed)  Ca.s.«ini  conven- 
tion; The  Russo-MaiK'liurian  railway  agreement:  .\nglo.Ru.ssian  agreement  respect- 
ing spheres  of  influence  in  China;  Treaty  of  offensive  and  defensive  alliance  between 
Great  Britainand  .lapan;  Sjiecimen  of  the  regulationsconcerning  foreign  joint  stock 
compinies  operating  in  Russia. 

Bookwalter,  John  Wesley.     Siberia  and  Central  Asia. 

Springfield,  0.:  IXew  York  printed,  .J.  J.  Little  it-  ro.],  1S99.     .r.rri,  ,'t48  pp. 
Ill)i.':tralioiis.     S°. 

Carol,  Jean.     C<jli)nisation  rasse:  les  deux  routes  du  Caucase;  notes  d'un  touriste. 
Paris:  Hachelte  et  cie.,  1899.     .el,  ,311  pp.     Illustrations,     ^faps.     8°. 

Cliirol,  Valentine.     The  middle  eastern  question;  or,  Some  political  ]iroblenis  of 
Indian  ilefence.     With  maps,  illustrations,  and  appendites. 
IjOtidon:  J.  Murray,  190.1.    xir,.TlJjij>.   Piale.i.    Map.<i.   Genealor/ical  tables.    8°. 

••  Bibliography"  ;  pp.  ■199-^'>(K). 

Based  on  a  series  of  letters  written  for  the  Times.    Preface. 

De  Windt,  Harry.     The  new  Siberia.     Being  an  account  of  a  visit  to  the  penal 
island  of  Sakhalin,  and  jxilitical  |irison  and  mines  of  the  trans-Baikal  dis- 
trict, Kastern  Siberia.     AVith  appendices,  map,  and  twenty-eight  illustra- 
tions. 
London:  Chapmanand  Hall,  189fi.    jriv,3S4pp.    Plates.    Portraits.    Map.    8°. 

Surrieux,  Alc^e.     Samarkand,  la  bien  gard^e. 

Paris:  Plon-Nourrit  &  cie.,  1901.     [4),  vi,  304,  (4)  pp.     Plates.     12°. 

Gerrare,  Wirt.     Greater  Russia.     The  continental  einpin-  of  the  old  world.     With 
illustrations  and  a  map. 
New  York:  The  Macmillan  com j)an!i,  1.003.     xiii,  (l),3,i7 pp.     Plates.     Folded 
map.     8°. 

HaVes,  Charles  H.     In  the  uttermost  East;   being  an  account  of   investigations 
among  the  natives  and  Russian  convicts  of  the  island  of  Sakhalin,  with 
notes  of  travel  in  Korea,  Siberia,  and  Manchuria. 
New  York:  Charles  Scribner' s  sons.     x.r.r,  478  pp.     Plates.     Maps.     8°. 

Hellwald,  Friedrich  von.     The  Russians  in  Central  .Vsia.     .V  critical  examination 
down  to  the  present  time  of  the  geography  and   history  of  Central  Asia. 
Tr.  from  the  (rerman  t>y  Theodore  Wirgnian. 
Henry  S.  King d- CO.,  [London],  1874.    -cx,  333pp.    Folded  map  (colored).    12°. 
12 


SELECT    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    RUSSIAN    ?;Xl'AN.SION 


13 


Krafit,  Huguet-.     A  travers   le   Turkestan    Russe;  ouvrage   illustre  de  deux  cent- 
soixante-cinq  gravurew  d'apres  les  cliches  de  I'auteur  et  contenant  une 
carte  en  couleurs. 
Paris:  Hachetteetc'^,  190^.    {6),vii,S3S,  {4)  pp.     IlhiMralionx.    Plates.    For- 
Iriiit.     Folded  map.     F°. 

Krahmer,  Gustav.     Russlaiid  in  Asien. 

Leipzig:  /Mcksrhnerdt  &  co.,  1897-UiOS.     6  vols.     Plates.     Maps.     8°. 

Contests:  vol.1.  Transka.spien  und  seine  Elsenbahn.  O.  Heyfelder:  vol.  2.  Ru.ssland 
ill  Millel-Asien;  vol.  3.  .Sibirien  und  die  grosse  sibirische  Eisenbahn:  vol.  4.  Ru.^sland 
in  Ost-A.sien:  vol.  .i.  Das  nordostliehe  Kiistengebiet;  vol.  6.  Die  Beziehvmgen 
Ru-sslands  zu  Persien. 

Krausse,  Alexis.     Russia  in  Asia.    A  record  and  a  study.    1558-1899. 
Loudon:  d.  Richards,  1899.     42S  pp.     Maps.     8° 

LiBgras,  Jules.     En  Siberie. 

Paris:  Armand  Colin  &  cie.,  1899.     xvii,  384  pp.     Illustrations.     Map.     12°. 
Cover-title:  2.  ed. 

Meakin,  Annette  M.  B.     In  Russian  Turkestan:  a  garden  of  Asia  and  its  people. 
London:  George  Allen,  1903.     rrii,  {1),  316  pp.     Plates.     Map.     12°. 

Norman,  Henry.     All  the  Russias;  travels  and  studies  in  contemporary  European 
Russia,  Finland,  Siberia,  the  Caucasus,  and  Central  Asia. 
XeuYork:  C.  Scrilmer's sons,  1902.    (4),  .rii,  {2),476 pp.    Illustrations.    Plates. 
Maps.     8°. 

Rambaud,  Alfred  Xic(jlas.     The  expansion  of  Russia;   problems  of  the  East  and 
problems  of  the  Far  East;    with  an  essay  on  the  Russian  people,  by  J. 
Novicow.     -d  ed. 
Xev:  York:    .Scott-Tlian    ro.npanij,  1904.     (<S),  254  pp.     12°.     (Contemporary 
thought  series.     II. ) 

Bavenstein,  E.  G.     The  Russians  on  the  Amur;  its  discovery,  conquest,  and  colo- 
nization, with  a  description  of  the  country,  its  inhabitants,  productions, 
and  commercial  cai)abilities;  and  personal  accounts  of  RiLssian  travellers. 
London:  Triihner  and  co.,  1861.     .i-.c,  467  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     Mapt. 
8°. 

Beid,  Arnot.     From  Peking  to  Petersburg. 

London:  E.  Arnold,  1899.     ri,  (2),  300 pp.     Frontispiece.     Map.    8°. 

Russia's  march  towards  India.     By  "An  Indian  officer." 

London:  Sampson  Lou;  Marston  it-  company,  1S94.     2  rots.     Map.     8°. 

Contains  an  account  of  Russia's  iidvance  towanls  India  from  the  earliest  times  up  to 
the  present  day. 

Semenov,  Petr  Petrovich.     La  Russie  extra-europeenne  et  polaire  Sib^rie,  Caucase, 
Asie  centrale,  Extreme-Nord. 
Paris:  P.  Dupont,  1900.     (4)  342 pp.      Folded  map.     8°.     {Commission  impe- 
riale  de  Ru.isie  a  I'  Krposition  tmirerselle  de  1900. ) 

Skrine,  Francis  Henry.     The  expansion  of  Russia,  1815-1900. 

Cambridge:  Cambridge  Vniiersity press,  1903.     vi,S86pp.     Maps.     8°.    {Carn- 
bridge  historical  series. ) 

Skrine,  Francis  Henry,  and  Eilward  Denison  Ross.     The  heart  of  Asia.     A  history 
of  Russian  Turkestan  and  the  Central  Asian  Khanates. 
London:  Methuen  iS:  company,  1899.    xi,  (1),  444  pp.    Illustrations.    Maps.    8°. 


14  .  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Stadling,  Jonas  Jonsson.     Through  Silxria.     Ed.  by  K.  H.  H.  (iuillemard. 

]\\st milliter:  A.   Constable  &  co.,  1901.     .rvi,  31a  pp.     IUuslralion».     Platen. 
M<ip.     S°. 

Ukhtomskii,  Esper  Esperovich,  kniai^.  Travels  in  the  East  of  Nicholas  ii.  emperor 
(if  Russia,  when  cesarewitch,  1890-]8!11.  Written  by  orderof  His  Imperial 
Majesty,  and  translated  from  the  Russian  by  R.  Goo<llet,  edited  by  Sir(T. 
Birdwood. 
Lfimlon:  A.  Constable  &  co.,  1896-1900.  3  vols.  Illmtratioiut.  Plates. 
Portrailfi.     F°. 

Wright,  George  Frederick.     Asiatic  Ru.ssia. 

Xi'u-  York:  McClure,  Phillips  ifc  ro.,  1902.     S  vols.     Plates.      Folded  maps.     S°. 

Contents:  Physical  geography:  Ru^^ian  occupation;  Riis-siun  colonization:  Political 
divisions;  Social,  economic,  and  i»olitical  conditions;  Natural  history:  Biblio^aphy. 

Yorck  von  Wartenburg,  Maximilian,  draf.     I  )as  Vordringen  der  russischen  Macht 
in  Asien.     2.  Auflage. 
Berlin:  E.  S.  Mittleruiid  Soliii,  / 900.     67,  (1)  pji.     Map.     8°. 

RUSSIAN  EXPANSION:   ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1898.     Dans  le  Tian  Chan  Russe.     Autourdel'Issyk  Koul.     (i.  Saint- Yves. 
AnnaleJi  de  geograpMe,  vol.  8  (May  IS,  1898):  201-215. 

1900.     Dans  leTian  Chan  Russe.     De  L'Issyk  Koul  an  Ferghana.     G.  Saint-Yves. 
Aunales  de  geographic,  vol.  9  {Mar.  15,  1900):  119-140. 

1900.     Russia's  field  for  Anglo-Saxon  enterprise  in  Asia.     Alexander  Hume  Ford. 
Engineering  magazine,  vol.  19  {.fnne,  1900):  854-368. 

1900.     Russian  Central  -Vsia:  countries  and  jieojiles.     With  map.     Archibald  R. 
Colfjuhoun. 
Society  of  Arts.     .Toumal,  vol.  48  (.June  1.  1900):  554-568. 

1900.     Is  Russia  to  control  all  of  Asia?    A.  H.  Ford. 
Cosmopolitan,  vol.  29  {July,  1900):  253-265. 

1900.     La  politique  russe  en  Chine.     B.  de  Zenzinoff. 
Correspondani,  vol.  200  {Aug.  25,  1900):  662-669. 

1900.     The  expansion  of  Ru.ssia:  problems  nf  the  East  and  problems  of  the  Far 
East.     Alfred  Rambaud. 
International  monthly,  vol.  2  {Sept.,  1900):  Jll-251;  {Oct.,  1900):  341-361. 

1900.     China  and  Russia.     Josiah  Quincy. 

Xorth  American  review,  vol.  171  {October,  IHOO):  528-542. 

1900.     Russia's  foreign  policy.     A  Russian  publicist. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  78  {Dec,  1900):  776-783. 

1900.  The  spread  of  Russia.     Poultney  Bigelow. 
Independent,  vol.  52  {Dec.  20,  1900):  3021-3025. 

1901.  Russia  and  the  "open  door."     A  Russian  publicist. 
Contemporary  review,  vol.  79  {Feb.,  1901):  188-194. 

1901.     Engineering  opportunities  in  the  Russian  empire.     Alexander  Hume  Ford. 
Engineering  magazine,  vol.  21  {April,  1901):  29-42. 


RUSSIAN  expansion:  akticles  in  periodicals  15 

1901.     Russia's  conquest  of  Asia.     John  Kimberly  Mumford. 
WorlcFs  u!OTk,  vol.  2  (May,  1901):  704-719. 

1901.     Recentes  explorations  nisses  en  Asie.     .1.  Deniker. 

Gi'ographie,  vol.  4  {.Tuhj,  inOl):  21-28. 

1.  Lf  Kamtchatka  et  le  littoral  de  la  mer  d'Okhotsk. 

2.  Demieres  nouvelles  de  I'expMition  Kozlov  'en  Asie  Centrale. 

1901.     The  colonization  of  Siberia.     R.  E.  C.  Long. 
FoTum,  rol.  32  (Oct.,  1901):  172-189. 

1901.  Rus.sia  as  a  great  power.     Sydney  Brooks. 

^Yorld' s  uvrl:,  vol.  2  {Oct.,  1901):  1277-128^. 

1902.  The  new  California  [Siberia].     S.  M.  Williams. 
Munsey's  magazine,  vol.  26  (Mar.,  1902):  753-764- 

1902.  The  future  of  Ru.ssia.     A.-R.  B.-de  Bilinski. 
Xineieenth  century  and  after,  rol.  .52  (.lug.,  1902):  201-217. 

1903.  Russia's  quest  of  the  Pacific.     Frederic  Austin  Ogg. 
Choutauquan,  vol.  36  (Jan.,  1903):  358-369. 

1903.     The  Russianization  of  Asia.     W.  C.  Jameson  Reid. 
Gvnton's  magazine,  vol.  24  (Feb.,  1903):  102-106. 

1903.     Present  tendencies  of  Russian  policy.     Charles  Johnston. 
Xorth  American  review,  vol.  176  (May,  1903):  765-777. 

1903.     Shall  Rus.sia  own  the  earth?    A.  Maurice  Low. 
Publie  opinion,  vol.  34  (May  14,  1903):  61.5-ini;. 

1903.     Les  Russes  en  extreme-orient.     Paul  Labbe. 

Questionii  diplomntiquea  et  coloniales,  vol.  15  (May  15,  1903):  623-639. 

1903.     La  Russie  en  Chine.     Ptoe-Siefert. 

RcFue  de  geographie,  27.  annee  ( May,  1903) :  408-420. 

1903.     The  shadow  of  Russia  in  the  Far  East. 

Gunton'.H  magazine,  vol.  25  (Aug.,  1903):  116-119. 

1903.     La  preponderance  de  la  Russia  en  extreme-orient.     B.  de  Zenzinoff. 

Revue  politique  et  litteraire  revue  bleue,  vol.  20  (Aug.  29,  1903):  261-265;   (Sept. 
5,  1903):  293-297. 

1903.  The  Russian  absorption  of  Asia.     Charles  W.  Barnaby. 

^yor^d' »  work,  vol.  7  (Nov.,  190.1):  4118-4125. 

1904.  The  conquest  of  Asia  by  Russia.     John  Brisben  Walker. 

Cosmopolitan,  vrd.  36  (Feb.,  1904):  381-380. 

1904.     Russland  und  China  bis  zum  Vertrage  von  Nertschinsk.     Georg  Henning. 
Grenzboten,  63.  .Tahrgang  (Feb.  25,  1904):  441-449;  (Mar.  3,  1904):  503-511. 

1904.     The  Slav  and  his  future.     Kniil  Reich. 

Fortnightly  revieir,  n.s.,  rol.  75  (.1/or.,  1904):  .171-382. 
Eclectic  magazine,  vol.  142  (June,  1904):  724-733. 
Living  age,  vol.  241  (April  9,  1904):  65-74- 


16  LIBRARY    OK    CONGRESS 

1904.     Vladivostock.     Ivan  Beschinoff. 

France  itlustrh,  SI.  annie  (Mur.  12,  1904):  171-172. 

1904.     Kussia's  commercial  expansion:  a  brief  sketch  of  her  enterprising  methods. 
Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  4  {Afar.,  1904):  197-199. 

1904.     Why  Russia  has  gone  eastward.     Louis  K.  Van  Noruian. 
Outlook,  rol.  71!  (Mor.  12,  1904):  iJ.i9-<i4S. 

1904.     Lea  Russes  en  Mandchourie.     J.  L.  Croze. 

Vie  illuntrc-e,  7.  annPe  (Mar.  4,  1904):  S58-SG0. 

1904.     Kussia's  civilizing  work  in  .\sia.     G.  Frederick  Wright. 

Americnn  niuntlibj  reriev  of  rerieuv,  vol.  29  {Apr.,  1904):  437-432. 

1904.     The  history  nl  Port  .\rthur.     .losepli  II.  Longford. 

Xiiicteeiitli  renturij  and  after,  rol.  55  {Apr.,  1904):  (SlS-629. 

1904.     L'Asierusse.     G.  Treffel. 

Revue  univergelle,  rol.  4  {May  15, 1904):  257-36$. 

1904.     Russian  emigration  to  Siberia.     Bruno  Sinimerl)acli. 

Aimrican  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  .30  {July,  1904):  91-92. 


TRANS-vSIBERIAN  RAILROAD 

Boulangfier,  Edgar.     Notes  de  voyage  en  SiWrie;  le  chemin  de  fer  trans-aiMrien  et 
la  Chine. 
Paris:  Societed' editions  scieniifique,  'S91.  T>i,397,(S)pp.    lUustralions.    Plates. 
Folded  maps.     4°. 

Gary,  Clarence.     The  Trans-Siberian  route;  or,  Xotes  of  a  journey  from  Pekin  to 
New  York  in  1902. 
New  York:  The  Erening  Post  job  jtrintinghowfe,  190^.     .53 pp.     Plates.    Folded 
map.    8°. 

The  author  was  chief  correspondent  of  the  Associated  Press. 

Colquhoun,  Archibald  Ross.     The  great  Trans-Siberian- JIanchurian  railway. 
(/n  Ais  Overland  to  China,  pp.  117-150.    New  York.  1900.    8°) 

Crawford,  Jolin  Martin.     The  great  Siberian  railway. 

I  In  I'nited  .States  Consular  reports,  vol.  4.5,  no.  166,  July,  18*4,  pp. 425-4M.     [Map.]) 

Dmitrief-Mamonof,  A.  .1.  and  .\.  F.  Zdsiarsky,  eds. 
See  Russia. 

Gourdet,  Paul.     Le  chetnin  de  fer  en  Asie  centrals  jonction  du  Transcaspien  avec  le 

Transsiberien. 

( In  CongrSs  national  des  societfs  f ranf aises  de  gtographle,  xixe  session.— Marseille. — 
Septembre  1898,  pp.  256-274.    Marseille,  1899.    8°.) 

Great  Britain.     Foreign  office.     Russia.     Report  on  the  Trans-Siberian   railway. 
29  pp.     Folded  sheet.     8°. 

(Jn  Great  Britain.  Foreign  office.  Diplomatic  and  coosiilar  reports.  [1900.]  Miscel- 
laneous series,  no.  .533.) 

"  Sketches  the  history  of  the  Siberian  railway  project  and  its  probable  influence  on 
Siberian  trade  and  settlement,  \yith  a  section  on  the  resources,  etc..  of  the  country." 

Institut  colonial  international.     Bnurelles.     Les  chemins  de  fer  aux  colonies  et 
dans  les  pays  neufs. 
Institut  colonial  international,  BnixeUes,  1900.     3  vols.     Plans.     Diagrams.    8°. 
[Piblioth^qite  coloniale  intemationale.) 
Transsiberien,  vol.  2,  pp.  721-733. 

Jefferson,  Robert  L.     Roughing  it  in  Siberia;    with  some  account  of  the  Trans- 
Siberian  railway,  and  the  gold  mining  industry  of  Asiatic  Russia. 
London:  Sampson  Loii\  Marston  tk  CO.,  1897.     [8),  352  pp.     Plates.     Portrait. 
Map.     13°. 

Erahmer,  G.     Sibirien  und  die  grosse  sibirische  Eisenbahn. 

Leipzig:  ZuchschuerdtS: CO.,  1897.     ir,  (S),  103 pp.     Folded  map.     8°.     (Russ- 
land  in  Asien.     Bd.  III. ) 

Labbe,  Paul.     La  situation  dea  provinces  travers^ea  par  le  Transsiberien. 

(In  Societ<?  de  geographic  comn.erciale  de  Paris.  Bulletin,  vol.  23.  pp.  .514-5'29.  Paris, 
1901.    8°.) 

327S4— 04 2  17 


18  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Lynch,  George.     The  jMith  nf  empire. 

Lomhin:   Ihtcknorlli  iC-  to.,   190S.     xix,  Jn7  pji.     Platen.     Portraits.      Folded 
map.     S". 

Contents;  From  Kobe  lo  Korea.— The  path  of  empire  through  Korea.— In  the  hind  of 
the  morninK  ealm. — Dahiy,  llie  conimereial  terniinu.'^iif  the  Trans-.'^iberian  railway. — 
Port  .Vrtliur.  the  military  terminus  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railway.— Pekin  revisited. — 
The  .Tapanisation  of  China. — From  I'ekin  to  New-Cliwang;. — Through  Manehnrin. — 
The  im[>ortanee  of  Manchuria. — The  patli  of  empire  throUKh  Mongolia. — Lake 
Baikal. — Irkiilsk. — People  one  meets  on  the  way. — From  Irkutsk  to  Tomsk. — The 
expre.-^s. — The  reform  of  the  exile  system. — Aeros.s  the  Obi  ba.sin. — The  great  trek 
eastward. — I'nto  Moscow,  the  heart  of  Russia. — Whore  leads  the  Russian  path  of 
empire? — .\ppendi.x. 

Huge,  8ophn.«.     Die  sibirische  Eisenbahn.     \'i)rtraK,  gehalten  in  iler  Gelie-stiftting 
zu  Dresden  am  12.  Oktober  1901. 
Dnwien:  Ziilm  iC'  .lacn,  1901.     .r2  ]>j).     .s'".     (.fahrhuch  der  Gehe-sti/tung  zu, 
Dresden.     Bd.  X.,  lift.  1.) 

t'over-tille:  Die  transsibirische  Eisenbahn. 

Russia.     Siberia  and  the  Great  Siberian  railway.     Kditor  of  the  English  transla- 
tion, John  Martin  Crawford. 
St.  Petenshurij:  [Treiihd: Fu.mot, printers'],  189S.    xii,S65pp.    Foldedmap.    4°. 
Forms  Vol.  ^  of  "The  industries  of  Russia.'* 

Guide  to  the  Great  Siberian  railway.     Published  by  the  Mini.stry  nf  ways  of 

communication,  edited  liy  A.  1.  Dmitriev-Mamonov  and  A.  V.  Zdziarski. 
English  translation  by  ^liss  L.  Kiikol-Yasnopolsky,  rev.  by  John  Marsliall. 
St.    Peterfhnrij:    ArtiKtiv   printing   soriety,  1900.      (j),  520  pp.      lUimtratiuns. 
Plates.     Portraits.     Folded  maps.    Folded  plnn.i.     S°. 

Guide  du  grand  chemin  de  fer  trans-sib^rien.     Edite  par  le  Ministere  de.s 

voie.s  de  comnuniication,  sous  la  redaction  de  A.  I.  Dmitrief-Mamonof  et 
de  ring<''nieur  A.  F.  Zdsiarsky,  tr.  du  russe  par  P.  Tacchella. 
St.-Petershonrtj:  Societi  d' imprexnioH  iirtisti<iue,  liiOO.     (4), 57 2 pp.    lllnxtrntions. 
Plates.     Portraits.     Folded  maps.     Folded  plans.    S°. 

Wegweiser  auf   der  grossen    sibirischen  Eisenbahn;    herausgegeben    unt«r 

Redaktion   von  A.    I.    Dmitrijew-Mamonow  und  des  Ingenieurs   .\.    F. 
Zdziarski.     Aus  dem  Russischen  von  A.  Liitachg. 
St.- Petersburg:    KmistdruckgeselLschafl,     1901.     (4),    602    pp.      JllustrtUions, 
Plates.     Portraits.     Folded  maps.     8°. 

Shoemaker,  Michael  Myers.     The  great  Siberian  railway  from  St.  Petersburg  to 
Pekin. 
G.  P.  PiUnam's  so)is,  New  York  rind  London,  190S.     viii,  (S),  243  pp.     Plate. 

Simpson,  James  Young.     Side-lights  on  Siberia.     Some  account  of  tiic  great  Siberian 
railroad,  the  prisons  and  the  exile  system. 
William  Blackwood  and  sons,   Edinburgh  and  London,   1898.      .rei,  S83  pp. 
Plates.     Folded  map.     8°. 

Stahl,  A.  F.     Entlang  der  sibirischen  Bahu. 

( III  Geographisehc  Zeitschrilt,  vol.  X,  pp.  81-92.    Leipzig,  1902.    8°) 

TTnited  States.     Bureau  of  statistics.     The  Russian  empire  and  the  Trans-Siberian 
railway. 

(In  itH  Monthly  summary  of  commerce  and  finance,  n.  s.,  vol.  6,  April,  1899,  pp. 
2501-2899.    Folded  map.    Washington,  1899.    i°.) 


TRANS-SIBERIAN    RAILWAY:    ARTICLES    IN    VERIODICALS 


19 


Vladimir,  [pstaiir].     Rui-gia  on  the  Pacific,  and  the  Siberian  railway. 

London:  .Sampson,  Lou;  Afarstontk CO.,  1899.     xn,373pp.    Plates.     Maps.    8°. 

Wiedenfeld,  Kurt.     Die  sibirisclie  Bahn  in  ihrer  wirtschaftlichen  Bedeutung. 
Berlin:  Julius  Springer,  UiOO.     (4) ,  202  pp.     Map.     8°. 

"Begins  vnlh  an  hLstoriwil  survey  of  the  Russian  occupation  of  Northern  Asia;  then 
tal£Cs  up  the  history  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railway  from  its  inception  and  considers 
its  commercial  importance  and  its  effect  upon  the  development  of  Siberia,  with 
much  statistical  information.    The  sources  of  information  are  given  in  footnotes." 


TRANS-SIBERIAN  RAILWAY:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1891.     The  Siberian  railroad. 

Railroad  ijazette,  vol.  23  {Jul;/  10,  1S9J):  476. 
Review  of  report  of  Nicolai  Woloshinow. 

1893.     The  western  section  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railroad.     Michel  Nicolaevich 
Ghercevanof. 
Railroad  gazette,  vol.  25  {Feb.  17,  1893):  1S2-1SS. 

1893.  The  Siberian  railroad  [progress  of  the  enterprise]. 

Railroad  gazette,  rol.  2.5  {Dec.  8,  189.3):  890. 

1894.  The  political  and  economic  importance  of  the  great  Siberian  railway.     Her- 

mann Scliimfeld. 
Engineering  magazine,  vol.  7  {July,  1894):  467-473. 

1896.     The  climate  along  the  route  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railroad.     Frank  "i\'aldo. 

Railroad  gazetU,  rol.  28  {Apr.  10,  1896):  256-257. 

1896.     The  Siberian  railroad.     Herbert  H.  D.  Peirce. 
Railroad  gazette,  rol.  28  {Aug.  7,  1896):  ■553-5.54. 

1896.     The  Siberian  railroad. 

Railroad  gazette,  vol.  28  {Oct.  23,  1896):  737-738. 

"A  list  of  articles  relating  to  the  Siberian  railroad  which  have  appeared  in  the  '  Kail- 
road  gazette.' " 

1896.     The  great  Siberian  railway. 

Engineer  {London),  rol.  82  {Xov.  6,  1896):  459. 

1896.  The  Trans-Siberian  railway. 

Engineering  news,  vol.  36  (Nov.  19,  1896):  322-324. 

1897.  From  London  to  the  Far  East  by  railway. 
Engineering,  rol.  63  {May  14,  1897):  649-650. 

1897.     Siberian  railway  extension  in  China. 

Engineer  {London),  vol.  83  {June  4,  1897):  .562. 

1897.  The  Manchurian  extension  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railway.     With  map. 
Engineering  news,  vol.  38  (Nov.  11,  1897):  308-309. 

1898.  La  Sib^rie  et  le  Transsib^rien.     Le  pays  et  ses  habitans.     Le  cheiuin  de 

fer.     Pierre  Leroy-Beaulieu. 
Revue  des  deu.r  monde«,  vol.  146  (March  15, 1898):  324-358;  vol.  148  {Aug.  15, 
1898):  808-844. 


^^ 


20  LIBRARY    i>F    CONGRESS 

1898.     The  Trans-Siberian  railway:  its  new  terminus  in  China.     Clarence  Cary. 
/brum,  rol.  SS  {May,  1898):  S8'>-299. 

1898.     The  Trans-Si Ix-rian  railway.     [Details  from  the  Report  of  the  Imperial 
commi.ssion  to  the  Tsar.] 
Engineer  {London),  vol.  85  (June  S,   1898):  519-520;    rol.  8G  {.Tulij  8,  1898): 
3.5-S6;  {July  29,  1898):  99-100. 

1898.  Quinquennial  report  of  the  Committee  for  building  the  Siterian  railroad. 
Rwlroad  gazeUe,  vol  SO  {Sept.  16,  1898):  66S-664. 

1899.  The  Trans-Siberian  railway  and  the  coal  resources  of  Siberia. 
Irrm  and  coal  trader  reiriev;  rol.  58  {Jan.  37,  1899):  151-15S. 

1899.     The  Trans-Siberian  railway. 

Engineer  {London),  vol.  87  {Apr.  7,  1899):  SSI. 

1899.     The  Trans-Siberian  railway.     William  Durban. 

Contempornri/  rerieir,  vol.  7H  {Aug.,  1899):  S61-271. 

1899.     The  Trans-Siberian  railroad.     Henry  Michelsen. 

Scientific  American,  rol.  95  {Aug.  26,  1899):  136-137. 

Scientific  American  xupplement,  rol.  48  {Aug.  S6,  1899):  19784-19785. 

1899.  Rassian  railway  policy  in  Asia.     R.  E.  C.  Long. 
Fortnightly  revieu},  n.  «.,  rol.  66  (Dec,  1899):  914-9SS. 

1900.  Die  transsibirische  Eisenbahn.     .losef  Grunzel. 
Deutsche  Rundnchnu  fitr  Geographic,  vol.  23  (1900):  27-31. 

1900.     Die  wirtschaftliche  Bedeutnng  der  sibirischen  Bahn.     Kurt  Wiedenfeld. 

Archiv  fi'ir  Eixentiahnen,  rol.  23   (Mar.-Apr.,    1900):   341-397;    (May-.Tune, 
1900):  693-7.56;  (July-Aug.,  1900):  89,5-943;  (Sept.-Oct.,  1900):  1095-1124. 

1900.     The  marine  department  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railroad.     Waldon  Fawcett. 
Scientific  American,  vol.  96  (Mar.  31,  1900):  200. 

1900.     The  Great  Siberian  railway.     With  map.     M.  Mikhailoff. 
Xorth  American  review,  vol.  170  (May,  1900):  593-608. 

1900.     The  opening  up  of  Siberia  by  the  Trans-siberian  railway. 
Board  of  Trade  jounml,  vol.  30  (Aug.  2,  1900):  237-240. 

Report  of  the  British  commereial  a^ent  at  St.  Peterebnrg.    Taken  from  Foreign  Office, 
miscellaneous  series.  .5."?3. 

1900.     The  Trans-S'berian->Ianchurian  railway.     With  two  maps.     Archibald  R. 
Colquhoun. 
.Vonthly  reviev),  vol.  1  (Nov.,  1900):  40-55. 

1900.     Russia  of  to-day.     II.  The  great  Siberian  railway.     Henry  Norman. 
Scribner'i  magazine,  vol.  28  (Nov.,  1900):  51.'>-541. 

1900.  The  great  Trans-Siberian-Manchurian  railway.     With  two  maps,     .\rchibald 

R.  Colquhoun. 
Hoyal  united  gerriee  ingtitulion.     Journal,  rol.  44  (Dec,  1900):  I4O8-14SO. 

1901.  La  Sib6rie  et  le  grand  Transsib6rien.     L^on  Valine. 
Sevue  de  gerjgraphie,  vol.  48  (1901):  181-200. 

1901.     Die  wirtschaftliche  Bedeutnng  der  sibirischen  Eisenbahn. 
Koloniale  Zeitschrifl,  vol.  2  (Jan.  3,  1901):  13-14- 


TRANS-SIBERIAN    RAILWAY:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS         21 

1901.     The  great  Siberian  railroad.     With  map.     Arthur  Montefiore  Brice. 

Manchester  geographical  mcieiij.     Journal,  vol.  17  (Jan.-March,  1901):  37-45. 

1901.     Trade  and  the  Siberian  railway.     With  map.     A.  Kinloch. 
Monthly  revietv,  vol.  S  {Mar.,  1901):  60-71. 

1901.     The  progrei^s  of  the  Siberian  railway. 

Scientific  American  supplement,  vol.  SI  {Mar.  9,  1901):  21069-21060. 

1901.  From  Peking  to  St.  Petersburg  by  rail.     Alfred  Stead. 
American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  34  {Dec,  1901):  682-685. 

1902.  From  Japan  to  Europe  by  the  Trans-Siberian  route.     H.  A.  Bonar. 

Royal  united  aen'ice  institution.     Journal,  vol.  46  {Jan.,  1902):  18-38. 

1902.  The  great  Siberian  railroad,     .\rthur  M.  Brice. 
Cassell's  magazine,  n.  «.,  lol.  24  {Feb.,  1902):  357-364. 

1903.  Dalny,  a  fiat-city.     Clarence  Gary. 

Scribner's  magazine,  vol.  S3  {Apr.,  1903):  482-493. 

1903.     The  Trans-Siberian  railway. 

Geographical  journal,  vol.  21  {May,  1903):  5,53. 

1903.     The  great  Russian  railway  across  Asia.     J.  M.  Maclean. 

Magazine  <if  commerce,  vol.  2  (May,  1903):  281-283. 

1903.     Execution  complete  du  chemin  de  fer  transsib^rieu.     F.  Le  Beschu. 
Monde  illustri;  vol.  93  {Aug.  29,  1903):  204-206. 

1903.     Transsibcrien-Transmandchourien.     Andr6  Brisse. 

Revue  de  geographic,  27.  annee  {Aug.,  1903):  97-111;  {Sept.,  1903):  215-S28. 

1903.     La  Siljerie  et  le  transsiberien.     S.  Litman. 

Anrudes  de»  sciences  polUiques,  vol.  18  (Sept.  15,  1903):  573-589. 

1903.  America's  part  in  the  completion  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railway.     Alexan- 

der Hume  Ford. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  31  {Sept.  5,  1903):  19-20. 
Pacific  monthly,  vol.  10  {Dec,  1903):  380-382. 

1904.  En  route  pour  Wladivostock:  croquis  du  Transsiberien.     A.  Debibert. 

Correspondant,  vol.  214  {Feb.  25,  1904):  714-724. 

1904.     The  cost  of  the  Siberian  railroad. 

Railroad  gazette,  vol.  36  (Mar.  4,  1904):  161. 

1904.     De  Moscou  ii  Port-Arthur  et  Vladivostock.     Clavedy. 

Vie  illustree,  7.  aimee  (Mar.  18,  1904):  388-393. 

1904.     The  great  Siberian  railway.     James  W.  Davidson. 

Century,  vol.  67  (Apr.,  1904):  940-950. 

1904.     An  engineer's  views  of  the  Trans-Siberian.     L.  Lodian. 
Harjier's  weekly,  vol.  48  {Apr.  9,  1904):  548-549,  563. 

1904.     Military  aspects  of  the  Trans-Siberian  railway. 

Scientific  American,  vol.  90  {Apr.  16,  1904):  308-309. 

1904.     The  Siberian  railway  in  war. 

World  to-day,  vol.  6  {May,  J 904):  607-615. 

A  series  of  illustrations  with  descriptive  accounts. 


SAN 


O/ 


hitL-f  ^^^ 


TIBET 

Berard,  Victor.     Lord  Ciirzon  et  le  Til)et. 

(  Tn  Revue  de  Paris.  11.  ann<:'e,  vol.  1.  Feh.  l.^  1904,  pp.  881-8W:  11.  ann«e,  vol.  2.  March 
1.  1904,  pp.  197-224.) 

Bower,  Hamilton.     Diary  of  a  journey  across  Tibet. 

London:   liinngloii,   Perciial  ami  co.,   JS94.     rri,   S09  pp.     Plates.     Folded 
map.     Folded  diagram.     8°. 

Chirol,  Valentine.     The  middle  eastern  question;  or,  Some  political  problems  of 
Indian  defence. 
London:  J.  Murray,  IbOS.     xir,  51S  pp.     Plates.     Maps.     Genealogical  tablet. 

"Bibliography":  pp.  499-iiOO. 

Basc<l  on  a  series  of  letters  written  for  the  Times.    Pre/ace. 

"The  northeast  frontier  of  India."  pp.  aTO-363;    'The  question  of  Tibet."  pp.  364-377; 
Conventions  relating  to  Tibet,  pp.  467—176. 

Deasy,  Henry  Hugh  Peter.     In  Titet  and  Chinese  Turkestan;  being  the  record  of 
three  years'  exploration. 
New  York:  Longmans,  Green  &  CO.,  1901.     rvi,  430  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates. 
Portrait.     Map.     S°. 

Desgodins,  C.  H.     La  mission  du  Thibet  de  1855  i  1870,  comprenant  I'expos^  des 
affaires  religieuces,  et  ilivers  documents  sur  ce  pays,  accompagnee  d'une 
carte  du  Thibet  d'apres  les  lettres  de  -M.  I'abb^  Desgodins,  iiiissionnaire 
apostolique.     Par  C.-H.  Desgodins. 
Verdnn:  Ch.  Txiurent,  1873.     {_2),  ii;  419  pp.     Folded  map.     8°. 

Freshfield,  Douglas  W.     Round  Kangchenjunga;  a  narrative  of  mountain  travel 
and  exploration. 
London:  E.  Arnold,  190.9.     xvi,  S7S  pp.     Plates.     Maps.    4° ■ 

Includes  some  comment  on  the  present  political  situation  on  the  Tibetan  frontier  and 
on  the  events  that  led  up  to  it. 

Great  Britain.     Foreign  office.     East  India  (Tibet).    Papers  relating  to  Tibet.     Pre- 
sented to  both  Houses  of  Parliament  by  command  of  His  l,Iajesty. 
London:  Printed  for  His  Majesti/ s  stationery  office,  1904.    x,\_3'\-S14pp.    Folded 
map.     F°.     [Cd.  1930.] 

Dates  cover  Oct.  21,  1889-Jan.  30.  1904. 

Hedln,  Sven  Anders.     Central  Asia  and  Tibet  towards  the  holy  city  of  Lassa. 

London:  Ilurft  and  Bhwkett,  limited;   Sew  York:  C.  Scribner's  sons.  190S.     3 
vols.     Illtistrations.     PloteK.     Portraits.     Folded  maps.     8°. 
"Translated  by  Mr.  J.  T.  Bealby.'— Pret. 

Lander,  Arnol<l  Henry  Savage.  In  the  forbidden  land;  an  account  of  a  journey 
into  Tiljet,  capture  by  the  Til>etau-I^iiias  and  soldiers,  imprisonineiit, 
torture,  and  ultimate  release.  With  the  government  inquiry  and  report 
and  other  official  documents. 
New  York  and  lA/ndon:  Harper  A  hros.,  1899,  [/n<6.  1898].  3  vols.  Illustra- 
tions. Plates.  Portraits.  Map.  8°. 
22 


SELECT   LIST   OF   BOOKS    ON   TIBET  23 

Rijnhart,  Susie  Carson.     With  the  Tibetans  in  tent  and  temple;  narrative  of  four 
years'  residence  on  the  Tibetan  border,  and  of  a  journey  into  the  far 
interior. 
Chicago,  New  York,  [elc.]:  F.  II.  J{eiell  CO.,  1901.     (4),  400  pp.     Plates.     Por- 
traits.    Map.     S°. 

Bockhill,  'William  Woodville.     Diary  of  a  journey  through  Mongolia  and  Tibet  in 
1891  and  1892. 
Washington:  Published  by  the  Smithsonian  Institution,  1894-     ix;  (^),  4IS  pp. 
Plates.     Folded  map.    8°. 

The  land  of  the  lamas;   notes  of  a  journey  through  China,  Mongolia  and 

Tibet. 
Xew  York:  The  Century  co.,  1891.     viii,  {2),  399  pp.     Frontispiece.     Illustra- 
tions.    Maps.    8°. 

Sarachchandra  Dasa.    Journey  to  Lhasa  and  central  Tibet.    Ed.  by  the  Hon.  W.  \V. 
Rockhill. 
London:  John  Murray,  1902.    x,  (4),  386  pp.    Illvistrations.    Plates.    Portrait. 
Maps.     Plans.     8°. 

Published  by  the  Royal  geographical  society. 

Wellby,    M.  S.     Through  unknown  Tibet. 

London:  T.  FIslter  Umvin,  1898.     xiv,  440  pp.     Illustrations.     Portraits.    Maps. 
8°. 

"This  handsome  volume  gives  a  plain,  straightforward  narrative  of  the  journey  of 
Captain  Wellby  and  Lieutenant  Malcolm  across  Tibet  and  Northern  China,  an 
account  of  the  geographical  results  of  which  was  communicated  to  the  [Royal 
Geographical]  Society,  and  will  appear  in  the  Journal.  It  is  well  illustrated,  and 
has  a  series  o!  maps  of  the  route  on  the  large  scale  of  16  miles  to  an  inch." 

TIBET:   ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1903.  In  the  heart  of  the  forbidden  country;  or,  Lha.«a  revealed.     Archibald  R. 

Colquhoun. 
Cornhill  magazine,  vol.  87  (Jan..  1903):  39-52. 

1904.  Marco  Polo  and  his  followers  in  Central  Asia.     Archibald  R.  Colquhoun. 
Quarterly  remeu;  vol.  199  [Apr.,  1904):  553-575. 

1904.     Central  Asia  and  Tibet. 

Scottish  geographical  magazine,  rot.  20  (Apr.,  1904):  S02-313. 

1904.     Great  Britain  and  Thibet:  the  Asian  crisis.     E.  John  Solano. 
Blackwood's  Edinburgh  viagazine,  vol.  175  (May,  1904):  710-730. 

1904.     The  solution  of  the  Tibetan  problem.     Alexandre  Ular. 

Contemporary  reriiiv,  vol.  85  (May,  1904):  640-648. 

1904.     TurkesUin  and  a  corner  of  Tibet.     Oscar  T.  Crosby. 
Geographical  jourtial,  vol.  23  (June,  1904):  705-722. 

1904.     The  British  mission  to  Tibet.     Sir  Walter  Lawrence. 
Xorlh  American  rt-rieu;  vol.  178  (June,  1904):  869-881. 

1904.     Tibet.    Russia  and  England  on  the  international  chessboard.    Edwin  Maxey. 
Arena,  vol.  .32  (July,  1904):  28-31. 

1904.     The  forbidden  land:  the  march  of  civilization  into  Thibet.     W.C.Jameson 
Reid. 
Booklovers'  magazine,  vol.  4  (July,  1904):  17-28. 


MANCHURIA 

f  Artirlos  on  Manchuria  aro  likewise  to  be  foun<i  in  the  I'nited  States  Consular  Reports.) 

Colquhoun,  Archibald  Ross.     Overlami  to  China. 

-VfH'    York  and  Ijondon:   ILirper  X-  hTnlln'rs,    1900.     .n,  (1),  465  pp.     Plates. 
Folded  mapst.     8°. 

*' The  great  Traiis-Siberian-Manchurian  railway,"  I'p.  117-149. 
■•  Manchuria."  pp.  I.S8-2.St. 

Dowding',    H.    H.     The   Russian  camjiaign   in  Mancliuria,  ISIOO.     With  a  map. 

( /^n  L'niteil  ser\-ice institution  of  India.    .Journal,  vol.30.  July.  1901,  pp.  213-236.  Simla.) 

Enselme,  Ilippolyto  Marie  Joseph  Antoine.  A  travers  la  Mandehourie;  le 
chemin  de  fer  de  1'  Est  chinois  d'apres  la  mission  du  capitaine  H.  de  Bouil- 
lane  de  Lacoste  et  du  capitaine  Enselme.  Preface  du  comte  G.  du 
Chaylard. 
Paris:  J.  Ruff,  1903.  ix,  M)i  pp.  Frontispiece.  lUuslrations.  Plans.  Double 
map.     13°. 

Fraser,  John  Foster.     The  real  Siberia,  together  with  an  account  of  a  dash  through 
Manchuria. 
Ctis-ieV and  company,  London,  [etc.'\,  1902.    xvi,  279pp.     Plates.     Porlrtiil.    12°. 

Great  Britain.  Foreign  office.  China.  No.  2  (1901).  Despatch  from  His  Maj- 
esty's ambassador  at  St.  Petersburgh  respecting  the  Russo-Chinese  agree- 
ment as  to  Manchuria.  Presented  to  both  Houses  of  Parliament  by 
command  of  His  Majesty.  March  litOl. 
London:  Printed /or  Ills  .\fiijeKty's  Ktationery  office,  [1901].  -i  pp.  F°.  [Cd. 
4S9.-\ 

China.     No.  2(1904).     Correspondence  respecting  the  Russian  occu- 
pation of  Manchuria  and  Newcliwang.     Presented  to  both  Houses  of  Par- 
liament by  command  of  His  Majesty.     February  1904. 
London:  Printed  for  His  ifajesty'i<  stationery  office,    [1904].     .c',  {1),  9S  pp. 
F°.     [Cd.  19S6.1 

Hosie,  Alexander.      Manchuria:  its  people,  resources  and  history. 

-Viihueiiii- CO.,  London,  1901.   xi,{l),  29Spp.    Illuslrations.    Plale.'<.    Map.    8°. 

James,   Henry  Evan  Murchison.     The  Long  White  Mountain;  or,  A  journey  in 
Manchuria,  with  some  account  of  the  history,  people,  administration  and 
religion  of  that  country. 
jA>ndon:  Longmans,    dreen  and  co.,  18SS.     x.ciii,   (2),  .'>02  pp.     Illustrations. 
Plates.     Map.     S°. 

Parker,  F.dward  Harper.     Russia's  sphere  of  influence;  or,  A  thou.'-and  years  of 
Manchuria. 

(/n  The  Imperial  and  Asiatic  quarterly  review,  3d  ser.,  vol.  9,  .\pr.,  1900,  pp.  ■2S~-313.) 

Baffalovich,  Arthur.     Description  de  la  Mandchourie. 

iln  Societe  de  gcographie  commcrciale  de  Paris.     Bulletin,  vol.  19,  pp.  822-830.     Paris, 

I89r.     8°.) 
An  analysis  of  the  work  mi  ManchuriiL.  is.sued  by  the  Russian  Ministry  uf  Finance. 
24 


MANCHURIA:    ARTICLES   IN   PERIODICALS  25 

Ross,  John.     Mission  inethotls  in  Manchuria. 

Edinburgh:  Anderxon  d-  Ferrler,  1903.     362pp.     8°. 

Turley,  Robert  T.     Through  the  Hun  Kiang  gorges;  or,  Notes  on  a  tour  in  "  Xo 
mana  land,"  Manchuria.     With  map. 

{In  The  Geographical  journiil,  vol.  14,  Sept.,  1899,  pp.  292-3Cr2.  i 

Descriptive  notes  on  this  maji  by  G.  F.  Browne  are  given  in  the  Geographical  journal, 
June,  1900. 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.     Manchu  and  JIuscovite.     Letters  from  Manchuria  written  during 
autumn  of  190.3.     Historical  sketch  entitled  'Prologue  to  the  cri-^^is.' 
Sew  York:  The  MncmilUm  company,  1904.     .572  ]>p.     S°. 

Whigham,  H.  J.     Manchuria  and  Korea. 

London:  hbister  and  companij,  1904.     (6) ,  245  pp.     Plates.     Map.     8°. 

"Mr.  Whigham's  description  of  the  growth  of  Dalny,  the  commercial  terminus  of  the 
Siberiiin  railway,  which  bids  fair  before  long  to  become  a  second  San  Francisco,  of 
the  huge  army  which  has  already  been  distributed  throughout  Manchuria,  and  of 
the  various  an*angements  in  progress  for  the  elimination  of  Chinese  jurisdiction, 
shows  clearly  enough  that  Russia  has  committed  herself  t'X)  deeply  to  her  gigantic 
scheme  of  territorial  and  commercial  expansion  ever  to  retrace  her  steps.  .  .  .  Mr. 
Whigham  has  much  to  say  upon  economic  and  trade  matters  in  the  Far  East  that 
merits  careful  attention.  As  a  critic  of  British  policy  he  is  somewhat  of  a  tirebrand 
and  does  not  seem  to  make  sufficient  allowance  for  the  wide  issues  that  have  to  be 
con.sidered  in  dealing  with  a  very  complex  question." — Saturday  Review.  May  7. 
1901,.  p.  .Wi. 

Younghusband,  Francis  Edward.     Among  the  Celestials.     A  narrative  of  travels 
in  Manchuria,  across  the  Gobi  desert,  through  the  Himalayas  to  India. 
Abridged  from  "The  heart  of  a  continent." 
London:  .John  Murray,  1898.     rii,  (5) ,  261  pp.     Plates.     Folded  map.     8°. 

The  heart  of  a  continent:  a  narrative  of  travels  in  Manchuria,  across  the  Gobi 

desert,  through  the  Himalayas,  the  Pamirs,  and  Chitral,  188-1-1894. 
London:  John  Murray,  1896.     xvii,  (S),409pp.    Plates.    Portrait.    Maps.    8°. 

Zabel,  Kudiilf.     Durch  die  Mandschurei  und  Sibirien.     Reisen  und  Studien.     2. 
durch  eiu  Personal-  und  Sachregister  verm.  Auflage. 
Leipzig:  (I.   Wigand,  1903.      i-ii,  324  pp.     Illustratioiu.     Portrait.     8°. 
"  Nachweis  einiger  Werke  iiber  Sibirien  " :  pp.  312-314. 

MANCHURIA:    ARTICLEvS  IX  PERIODICALS 

1898.  The  Russians  and  Manchuria.     E.H.Parker. 

China  revieu;  vol.  33  (1898):  143-153. 

1899.  The  Manchurian  railway. 
Engineering,  vol.  68  (Sept.  1,  1899):  273. 

1900.  Railways,  rivers,  and  strategic  towns  in  Manchuria. 
Xallonal  giogruphic  iitagaziiw,  vol.  It  (Aug.,  1900):  326-327. 

1901.  Micawberisiu  in  Manchuria.     K.J.Dillon. 
Contemporary  revietv,  vol.  79  (May,  1901):  649-663. 

1901.     The  Russians  in  Manchuria.     Petr  A.  Kropotkin. 
Forum,  vol.  31  (May,  1901):  267-274- 

1901.     Trade-routes  in  Manchuria.     John  Ross. 

Scottish  geographical  magazine,  vol.  17  (June,  1901):  .^0.3-310. 


26  LIBRAKV    OK    CONGRESS 

1901.  Manchuria  in  transformation.     Archibald  R.  Colquhoun. 
.Uonthli/  renew,  vol.  5  {Oil.,  IWl):  58-72. 

1902.  Muscovite  designs  on  Manchuria.     L.  Miner. 
North  American  review,  vol.  174  {Mar.,  190S):  315S£8. 

1902.  Some  facts  about  Port  .Vrthur.     By  Sniper. 
L'lilhil  servicemitfjazitu;  ml.  14f>  {.Ipr.,  290S):  IS-SS. 

1903.  Die  wirtschaftlichen  Verhiiltnisse  der  Mandschurei.     v.  Kleist. 
Agien,  ml.  2  {Jan.,  1903):  65-66. 

1903.     Russian  rights  in  Mantchuria.     George  Frederick  Wright. 
Xation,  ml.  76  {Maij  21,  iao.3):  411-413. 

1903.     Japan  and  Manchuria. 

Speaker,  n.  «.,  vol.  S  {May  S,  1903):  111-112. 

1903.     Russia  in  Manchuria. 

Spectator,  vol.  90  {May  16,  1903):  768. 

1903.     American  interests  in  Manchuria. 

American  exporter,  vol.  52  {June,  1903):  34. 

1903.     Eastern  Siberia  and  Manchuria.     George  Frederick  Wright. 
Chautauquan,  ml.  i7  {.Tune,  1H03):  245-262. 

1903.     Russia  and  Manchuria.     £.  J.  Dillon. 

Contemporary  revieto,  vol.  83  {June,  190.1):  884-894. 

1903.     The  mischief  in  Manchuria.     Wirt  Gerrare. 

Fortnighlbj  review,  n.  a.,  vol.  73  {June,  1903):  1051-1059. 

1903.     Conquest  by  bank  and  railways,  with  examples  from  Russia  in  Manchuria. 

Alfri'd  Stead. 
Xineteenth  rnitiinj  and  after,  vol.  .53  {Jmii;  IftO.i):  936-949. 

1903.     The  Manchurian  outlook. 

American  e.rporter,  vol.  52  {July,  1903):  9. 

1903.     Our  JIaiuhurian  trade.     American  pioneer  [Sergey  Friede]  talksof  Russia's 
peril innances  and  intentions  in  that  region. 
American  exporter,  vol.  52  {July,  1903):  15. 

1903.      Russia  and  Manchuria. 

Atnericmi  iiujiithly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  28  (July,  1903):  87-88. 

1903.     The  reopened  door. 

Xation,  vol.  77  {July  gS,  1903):  6.5-66. 

1903.     The  Chinese  eastern  (Manchurian)  railway.     Alfred  Stead. 
Page's  magazine,  vol.  3  {Jtily,  1903):  21-28. 

1903.     Russia,  Manchuria  and  Mongolia.     Alexandre  Ular. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  84  {Au.g.,  1903):  1S9-20S. 

1903.     The  Manchurian  peril.     E.  R.  Thompson. 
New  liberal  review,  vol.  6  {.Aug.,  190S):  72-81. 

1903.     Au  Japon  et  en  Mandchourie.     Souvenirs  de  Van  dernier.     Paul  Labb^. 
Quegtion.t  diplomaiiques  el  coloniales,  vol.  16  {Aug.  1,  190-1):  198-220. 


manchukia:  articles  in  i-ekiodicals  27 

1903.     TranssiMrien-Transmandchourien.     Andrt^  Brisse. 

Rerue  de  geographic,  27e  annee  (Auij.,  1903):  97-111;  (Sept.,  1903):  215-228. 

1903.     Mandchourie  et  Coree.     Robert  de  Caix. 

Comite  de  V  Aiie  fram;aiM.     Bulletin  meimtel,  3.  annee  (Sept.,  1903):  S62-36S. 

1903.  The  Russification'of  Manchuria.     Alexander  Hume  Ford. 

Era  magazine,  vol.  12  (Sept.,  1903):  199-210. 

1904.  Le.*i  Russes  en  Mandchourie.     B.  de  Zenzinoff . 
A  trovers le  monde,  vol.  10  (Feb.  13,  1904):  49-52. 

1904.     En  Mandchourie:  les  Khoungouses.     Francis  Mury. 

0,rre.ipondant,  vol.  214  (Mar.  25,  1904):  1009-1024. 

1904.     The  political  and  commercial  situation  in  Manchuria.     H.  Fulford  Bush. 
Empire  rei-iew,  vol.  7  (Mar.,  1904):  97-108. 

1904.     British  intere-sts  in  Manchuria. 

Magazine  oj' commerce,  vol.  4  (Mar.,  1904):  176. 

1904.     Russian  development  of  Manchuria.     Henry  B.  Miller. 

Xational  geographic  magazine,  vol.  15  (Mar.,  1904):  113-12n. 

1904.     Lumbering  in  Manchuria.     Henry  B.  Miller. 

National  geographic  magazine,  vol.  15  (Mar.,  1904):  131-132. 

1904.     La  Mandchourie.     Paul  Barrc. 

Revue jranQaise  de  Vetranger  et  des  colonies  et  exploration,  vol.  29  (Mar.,  1904): 
155-165. 

1904.     Conditiona  in  Manchuria.     Henry  B.  Miller. 

Scientific  American  mpplement,  vol.  57  (Mar.  12,  1904):  23574-2S575. 

1904.     Russia's  work  in  Manchuria.     Sergei  lulitch  Witte. 
Harper's  iveekbi,  vol.  48  (Apr.  9,  1904):  544-54^. 

1904.     A  visit  to  the  Yalu  region  and  Central  Manchuria.     Robert  T.  Turley. 

Royal  fjeographical  societij.     Journal,  vol.  23  (Apr.,  1904):  473-481. 

1904.     Russia  in  Manchuria, — a  Russian  statement  [by  M.  Khoritz]. 
American  monthly  reviev  of  reviews,  vol.  29  (May,  1904):  602-604. 

1904.     Populations  de  la  Mandchourie  et  de  la  Cor^e.     Francis  Mury. 
Revue  de  geographie,  vol.  54  (May  1,  1904):  134-143. 

1904.     Notes  on  Manchuria.     Henry  B.  Miller. 

Xational  geographic  magazine,  vol.  15  (June,  1904):  ^61-262. 

1904.     Manchuria.     James  W.  Davidson. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  68  (July,  1904):  398-411. 


JAPAN 

Anderson,  William.     The  pictorial  arts  of  Japan.     With  a  brief  historical  sketch  of 
the  associated  arts  and  some  remarks  ujion  the  pictorial  art  of  the  Chinese 
and  Koreans. 
Boston:  IIou(jhton,  Mijjiin  ii-  CO.,  1SS6.     xx,  27i>,  (16)  pp.     Pl<ili:i.     F°. 

Bacon,  Alice  Mabel.     Japanese  girls  &  women.     Rev.  and  enl.  ed.,  with  illustra- 
tions by  Keishu  Takenouchi. 
Boston  and  AVic   York:  Hout/hton,  Mifflin  and  company,  190^.     .civ,  SS7,  (i) 
/(/<.     I'laies  {partly  colored).     8°. 

•    A  Japanese  interior. 

Boston  and  Xcw  York:  llonghton,  Mifflin  and  company,  189S,      xix,  (1),  267 
pp.     W. 

Bishop,  Isabella  L.  Bird.     Unbeaten  tracks  in  Japan;  an  account  of  travels  on  horse- 
Ijack  in  the  interior,  including  visits  to  the  aborigines  of  Yezo  and  the 
shrines  of  Nikko  and  ISC''. 
A'ew  York:  G.  P.  Putnam's  .ions,  1881.     3  vols.     Frordispieces.     Map.     8°. 

Brinkley,  Frank.     The  art  of  Japan. 

Boston:  J.  B.  Millet  CO.,  [1901].     ^  vols.     Illustrations  (partly  colored).     F°. 
Contents:  vol.  1.    Pictorial  art.— vol.  2.    Applied  art. 

Japan;  its  history,  arts  and  literature.     [Library  ed.] 

Bo.<<toii  and  Tokyo:  .J.  B.  Millet  co.,  [1901-1903].    Svols.    Plates  (partly  colored). 
8°.     ( Oriental  series. ) 

"Captain  Brinkley,  who  is  qunlifk'il  for  the  task  by  a  residenee  of  more  timii  thirty 
years  in  Japan,  and  by  a  knowledge  of  its  people  and  politics  almost  unique  among 
Englishmen,  has  opportunely  given  us  the  most  beautiful,  fascinating,  and  authori- 
tative work  on  that  country,  and  its  vast,  unwieldy  neighbour  of  China,  which  has 
yet  been  written  in  English."    .Spectator,  May  7,  1901,.  ji.  7SS. 

,    ed.    .Japan;  described  and  illustrated  by  the  Japanese;  written  by  eminent 

Japanese  authorities  and  scholars. 
Boston:  J.  B.  Millet  company,  [1897-1898].    v,  382  pp.    llluslratienis.     Colored 
plates.     F°. 

Japan;  described  and  illustrated  by  the  Japanese;  written  by  eminent  Jap- 

anese authorities  and  scholars;  with  an  essay  on  Japanese  art  by  Kakuzo 
Okakura. 
Boston:  J.  B.  Millet  company,   ['^1897-1898].     10  vols.     Colored  illustrations. 
Colored  plates.     F°. 

Bro-nme,  George  Waldo.     Japan;  the  place  and  the  people;  with  an  introduction  by 
the  Hon.  Kogoro  Takahira. 
Boston:  I).  Estes  <&  company,  [1904].     4'i8  pp.    Illustrations.     Plates  (partly 
colored).     Map.     8°. 

Published  in  1901  in  his  "The  Far  East  and  the  new  America,"  vol.2  (in  part)  and  vol.  3. 

Brownell,  Clarence  Ludlow.     The  heart  of  Japan;  glimpses  of  life  and  nature  far 
from  the  travellers'  track  in  the  land  of  the  rising  sun. 
New  York:  McClnre,  Phillips  d- CO.,  190.3.     (8),  307  pp.     Plates.     12°. 
Published  in  1902  bv  Methuen  &  co.,  London. 
28 


SELECT  LIST  OF  BOOKS  ON  JAPAN  29 

Chamberlain,  Basil  Hall.     Things  Japanese;    being  notes  on  various  subjects  con- 
nected with  Japan  for  the  use  of  travellers  and  others.     4th  ed.,  rev.  & 
enl. 
London:  J.  Murrny;    Yoknliamo:  \_i'lr.'\,  KHIy  &  WnUh,  IMS.     ri,{2),  54S pp. 
Folded  map.     S°. 
Notes  arranged  by  subject,  alphabetically. 

Chamberlain,  Basil  Hall,  mid  W.  B.  Slason.     A  handbook  for  travellers  in  Japan, 
iuclndinK  the  whole  empire  from  Yezo  to  Formosa.     7th  ed.,  rev. 
London:    ./.    Murra/i;  [etc.,  etc.],   1003.     ix,  (7),   5*6',  (S)  pp.   Illustrations. 
Folded  plates.     Maps  (partlij  folded).     Plans  [partly  folded).     IS". 

Conder,  Josiah.     Domestic  architecture  in  ,lapan. 

(In  Royal  institute  of  British  architects.  Transactions,  n.  s..  vol.  3.  pp.  103-127.  Illus- 
trations.   Plates.    Plans.    London.    1887.    4°.) 

Curtis,  William  Eleroy.     The  Yankees  of  the  East;  sketches  of  modern  Japan. 
Neiv  York:  Stone  &  Kimball,  1896.     2  vols.     Plates.     Portraits.     IJ". 

Dennys,  Nicholas  B.,  ed.  The  treaty  ports  of  China  and  Japan.  A  complete  guide 
to  the  open  ports  of  those  countries,  together  with  Peking,  Yedo,  Hong- 
kong, and  Macao.  Forming  a  guide  book  &  vade  niecum  for  travellers, 
merchantH,  and  residents  in  general. 
London:  Trhbner  and  co.,  1867.  liii,  [S),  668,  (2),  xinii,  (2),  26 pp.  Maps. 
Plans.     8°. 

Diosy,  Arthur.     The  new  Far  East.     With   illustrations  from   special  designs  by 
Kubota  Beisen,  of  Tokyo,  and  a  reproduction  of  a  cartoon  designed  by 
H.  M.  the  (ierman  Emperor  and  a  specially-drawn  map.     3d  ed. 
London:  Cassell  and  CO.,  1900.     xx,  374  pp.     Plates.     Maps.     8°. 

"This  is  a  brilliantly  written  history  of  New  Japan,  containing  much  instructive 
information  on  the  affairs  of  the  Far  East." 

Dumolard,  Henry.     Le  Japon  politique,  economique,  et  social. 

Paris:  A.  Colin,  1903.     viii,  342,  [2)  pp.     12°. 

Appendice. — i.  Constitution  japonaise  du  11  fi5vrier  1889.  n.  Projet  de  loi  ouvri^re: 
pp.  331-34-'. 

Fraser,  IMary  Crawford.    Letters  from  Japan.    A  record  of  modern  life  in  the  island 
empire. 
Sen'York & Lmidon.:  The Macmillan company,  1899.    2  vols.    Illustrations.     8°. 

Great  Britain.  Foreign  office.  Report  on  the  railways  of  Japan  (with  plans). 
Presented  to  both  Houses  of  Parliament  by  command  of  Her  Majesty, 
March,  1896.     (2),  29  pp.     Plates.     Folded  maps.     Diagram.     S°. 

(/»  Great  Britain.    Foreign  office.    Diplomatic  and  ccmsular  reports.    18%.    Mis- 
cellaneous series,  no.  390.) 

Griffis,  William  Elliot.     Matthew  Calbraith  Perry,  a  typical  American  naval  officer. 
Boston:  Ciipples  and  Hurd,  1887.     xm,  459 pp.    Frontispiece  {portrait).    Illus- 
trations.    12°. 
Japan,  pp.  270-37-1. 

The  Mikado's  empire.    10th  ed.,  with  six  supplementary  chapters,  including 

history  to  beginning  of  1903. 
New  York  and  London:  Harper  ib  brothers,  1904.    2  vols.    Illustrations.    Plates. 
Portraits.     Map.     8°. 

Contents:  v.  1.  Book  I,  History  of  Japan  from  (ICO  b.  c.  to  1872  .\.  D.— v.  2.  Book  II. 
Personal  experiences,  observalions.  and  studies  in  Japan.  1870-1875.  Book  HI. 
Supplementary  chapters,  including  history  to  the  beginning  of  1903. 


30  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Gulick,  Sidney  Lewis.     Evolution  of  tlie  Japanese,  social  and  psychic. 

Xfw  York,  London  [elr.]:  F.  II.  Retell  com panij,  [790.?].     ri,  467  pp.    S°. 

Heprn,  Lufcadio.     Glimpses  of  uufaniiliar  Japan. 

Boston  and  \ew  York:  Houghlon,  Mifflin  find  rompanii,  1,104.     2  roh.     if°. 

"Out  of  the  East;"  reveries  and  stuilies  in  new  Japan. 

Boxton  rind  Xeir  York:  Houghton,  Mifflin  and  company,  ISiio.     (G),  .S41  pp.    /~°. 

Helmolt,  II.  F.     Tlie  world's  history,  a  survey  of  man's  record.    Vol.11.    Oceania, 
Eiistern  .\sia,  and  the  Indian  ocean. 
London:   William  Heinemann,  1904.     •*',  (~),  S42  pp.     I'lates  (partly  colored). 
Portraits.     Facsimile.     Maps.    4°- 
Japan,  pp.  1-S6. 

Hertslet,  Sir  Edward.     Treaties  and   tariffs   regidating  the  trade  between  (ireat 
IMtain  and  foreign  nations:  and  extracts  of  treaties  between  foreign  pow- 
ers, containing  most-favoured-nation  clauses  applicable  to  Cireat  Britain. 
Japan.     In  force  on  the  Ij^t  April,  1879. 
London:  Batterworths,  1S79.     ir,  2SS,  ( 1)  pp.     8°. 

Inagaki,  Manjiro.     Japan  and  tlic  racilic.  ami  a  Japanese  view  of  the  Eastern  ques- 
tion. 
Xeii}  York:  Srrihiier  and  Wel/ord,  18.90.     JSn  pp.     Maps.     8". 

Jane,  Frederick  T.     The  imperial  .Iapane.se  navy. 

London:    W.    Tharker  d-  co.,   1904-     -'t',    (1),    410  pip.      Plates.      Portraits. 
Map.     4°. 

Koch,  W.     Japan,      (leschichte  nach   japanischen   Quellen  und  ethnographische 
Skizzen. 
Ihesden:   Verlag  von  W!lhel/n  Bnen.<icli,  1904.     (4),   v,   (.y),  410  pp.      Folded 
sheet.    8°. 

Lowell,  Percival.     The  soul  of  the  Far  East  [Japan]. 

Boston  and  Neic  York:  Houghton,  Mifflin  &  co.,  1888.     226  pp.     16°. 

Mitford,  Algernon  Bertram  Freeman.     Tales  of  old  Japan. 

London  and  Xew  York:  Mactnilhin  and  cii.,  18!tS.  xii,  S83  pp.  Plates.  13". 
Contests:  The  forty-seven  rfiiiins.— The  loves  of  Gompachi  and  Komurasaki.— Kn- 
zuma's  revenge.— A  story  of  the  Otokodate  of  Yedo.— Tlie  wonderlul  adventures  of 
Funakoshi  Jiny^'mon. — The  Eta  maiden  and  the  Hatamoto, — Fairy  tales. — Theghost 
of  Saknra.— How  Tajima  Shume  was  tormented  by  a  devil  of  his  own  creation. — 
Concerning  certain  superstitions.— Japanese  sermons.— .\ppendices:  .\n  account  of 
the  Hara-Kiri.  The  marriage  ceremony.  The  birth  and  rearingof  children.  Funeral 
rites. 

Morris,  J.     Advance  Japan:  a  nation  thoroughly  in  earnest. 

London:   ]y.  H.  Allen  d- co.,  189.5.      xix,  (1),  44.3 pp.     Plates  (woodcuts).     8°. 

What  will  Japan  do?     A  forecast. 

London:  Lairrenee  and  Bullen,  18.98.     .rii,  i:m  pp.     Folded  map.     13°. 

Horse,  Edwards.     Japanese  homes  and  their  surroundings.     With  illustrations  by 
the  author. 
Boston:  Ticknor  and  company,  1886.     xxriii,  (1),  .372  pp.     Ilhislralions.     4°. 

Murray,  David.     The  story  of  Japan. 

Xew  York:   <!.  I'.  I'utnnm's  sons;   London:  T.  F.  Vmcin,  1894.     x,  4.31  pp. 
IlluMrationf.    Plates.     Maps.     12°.     (  The  story  of  the  natiom,  v.  38. ) 


SELECT   LIST   OF    BOOKS    OX   JAPAN  31 

Norman,  Henry.     The  real  Japan.     Studies  of  contemporary  Japanese  manners, 
morals,  administration,  and  politics.     2d  ed. 
London:  T.  F.  Umrin,  1892.     364  pp-     I'lnlex.     8°. 

Okakura,  Kakasu.     The  ideaLs  of  the  East,  with  special  reference  to  the  art  of  Japan. 
London:  J.  Murrwi,  1903.     xxii,  SU  PP-     12°. 

Papinot,  E.     Dictionnaire  japonais-fran<;ais  dea  noms  principaux  de  I'histoire  et  de 
la  geographic  duJapon;  suivi  de  17appendice.s  sur  le.«  empereurs,  shogun, 
nengo,  sectes  bouddhistes,  provinces,  departements,  mesures,  etc. 
Hongkong:  Impr.  de  Nazareth,  1899.     lii,  297  pp.     1S°. 

Perry,  Matthew  Calbraith.     The  Americans  in  Japan:  an  abridgement  of  the  gov- 
ernment narrative  by  Robert  Tomes. 
New  York  &  London:  D.  Appletond:  CO.,  18o7.   viii,415pp.    Frontispiece.    Jllm- 
trations.     13°. 

Narrative  of  the  expedition  of  an  American  squadron  to  the  China  seas  and 

Japan,  performed  in  the  years  1852,  18.53,  and  1854,  under  the  command 
of  Commodore  M.  C.  Perry,  United  States  navy,  by  order  of  the  govern- 
ment of  the  United  States,  eomp.  from  the  original  notes  and  journals  of 
Commodore  Perry  and  his  officers,  at  his  request,  and  under  his  super- 
vision, by  Francis  L.  Hawks. 
New  York,  London:  D.  Applelon  A  company,  18.57.  .rvii,  (7),  537 pp.  Illus- 
trations.    Plates.     Portraits,     ifapf  (partly  folded).  Folded J'ascsimiUs.     8°. 

Narrative  of  the  expedition  of  an  American  squadron  .  .  .  comp.  ...  by 

F.  L.  Hawks. 
New  York:  D.  Appleton  and  CO.;  London:  Triibner  d-  ro.,  1857.     vii,  624  pp. 
Illustrations.     Plates.     Maps.     4°- 

This  ed,  contains  only  the  material  in  v.  1  of  the  government  ed. 

Bansome,  Stafford.     Japan  in  transition:  a  comparative  study  of  the  progress,  policy, 
and  methods  of  the  Japanese  since  their  war  with  China. 
New  York:  Harper  d- brothers,  1899.     (2),  jn;{l),  261  pp.     Plates.     Portraits. 
Maps.     8°. 

Rein,  Johann  Justus.     The  industries  of  Japan.     Together  with  an  account  of  its 
agriculture,  forestry,  arts,  and  commerce.      From  Travels  and  researches 
undertaken  at  the  cost  of  the  Prussian  government. 
London:    Hoddcr  and  filoughton,  18S9.     xii,  570  pp.      Illustrations.     Plates 
{partly  colored).     Maps.    8°. 

.K  translation  of  v.  2  of  his  "Japan,  nach  Reisen  und  Studien,"  published  in  1886, 

Japan:  travels  and  researches  undertaken  at  the  cost  of  the  Prussian  govern- 

ment.    Translated  from  the  German. 
New  York:  A.  C.  Armstrong  and  son,  1884.     x,   (2),  543  pp.     Plates  (partly 
phototype).     Maps  (partly  folded).     Plans.     8°. 

Scherer,  James  Augustin  Brown.     Japan  today. 

Philadelphia  and  London:  J.  B.  Lippincolt  company,  1904.     323  pp.     Plates. 
12°, 

The  author  was  for  many  years  a  teacher  of  English  at  Saga,  Japan, 

Sing-leton,  Esther,  ed.  and  tr.    Japan  as  seen  and  described  by  famous  writers. 

Netc  York:  Dodd,  Mead  and  company,  1904.     xii,  372  pp.     Plates.     8°. 

Contests:  Pt.  1,  The  country  and  the  race.— Pt.  2.  History  and  religion.— Pt,  3,  Places 
and  monuments.— Pt.  4.  Manners  and  customs,— Pt.  5.  Arts  and  crafts.— Pt,  6,  Mod- 
em Japan. 


32  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Sladen,  Douglas.     Queer  things  about  Japan. 

London:  Anthony  Trelieme  &  CO.,  1904.     xx.rv,  (1),  44s,  (1)  pp.     Plates  (partly 
colored).     S°. 

"Illustrations  by  the  celebrated  Hokusai,  never  before  reproduced  in  England." 

United  States.     Bureau  of  utalialics.     Coninieroial  .Japan  in  1904.     Area,  population, 
proiluction,  railways,  telegraphs,  and  transportation  routes,  and  foreign 
c'oiiinioree  of  United  States  with  Japan. 
W'lt.ihiaylon:  Govemtiietit  printing  offire,  1904.     Hi,  (1),  SS73-S017  pp.     Folded 
map.     4°. 

Cover-title. 

Reprinted  from  Monthly  summary  of  coninierci-  and  finance  for  Ft'b.,  190t. 

Watson,  (>ill)ert.     Three  rolling  stones  in  Japan.     3d  impression. 
L'lndon:  E.  Arnold,  1904.     .ri,  315  pp.     Plates.     8°. 

Watson,  W.  Petrie.     Japan;  aspects  &  destinies. 

London:  O.  Richards,  1904.     .riii,  (1),  SS6  pp.     Plates.     Folded  maps.     8°. 


JAPAN:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1897.  Le  developpement  ^conomique  du  Japon  depuis  la  guerre  centre  la  Chine. 

J.  Franeonie. 
SociHi:  de  geographic  commerci(de  da  IJarn:     Bulletin,  14.  annee  (1S97):  109- 

117;  1.31-138;  S14-323. 

Extract  from  "Annates  de  I'Ecole  libre  dcs  sciences  politiques." 

1898.  "Japan — A  forecast."     J.Morris. 

Lntperial  and  Asiatic  rpiarlerly  reciew,  3d  series,  vol.  5  (Apr.,  1898):  309-330. 

1899.  The  awakening  of  an  island  empire.     (Japan.)     R.W.Grant. 
Anglo-Amcrictm  magazine,  rot.  3  (Sep!.,  1899):  369-^7. 

1899.     The  commercial  development  of  Japan.     O.P.Austin. 

National  geographic  magazine,  vol.  10  (Sept.,  1899) :  SS9-SS7. 

1899.  Commercial  Japan.     0.  P.  Austin. 
Forum,  rill.  38  (Oct.,  1899):  140-159. 

1900.  .\  Japanese  view  of  Ransome's  Japan  in  transition.     A.  KinnosuM. 
Critic,  vol.  36  (May,  1900):  454-459. 

1900.     Misunderstood  Japan.     Y.  Ozaki. 

Xui-th  American  review,  vol.  171  (October,  1900):  566-576. 

1900.  Tlie  industrial  revolution  in  Japan.     Count  Okuma. 
Snrlh  American  review,  vol.  171  (Nor.,  1900):  677-691. 

1901.  .hipan  in  transition.     J.  C.  C.  Newton. 

I!,rieu'  of  missions,  vol.  32  (Aug.,  1901):  100-108. 

1902.  Les  finances  du  Japon.     Raphael-Georges  Levy. 

Annates  dis  sciences  poli\i(pies,  vol.  17  (.July,  1903):  444-473. 

1903.  The  position  of  Japan  in  the  Far  East.     Kogoro  Takahira. 
American  Asiatic  association.    Journal,  rot.  3  (Apr.,  1903):  86-88. 

1903.     .Japan's  position  in  the  Far  East.     Alfred  Stead. 

Furtnighlty  revieu;  n.  s.,  vol.  74  (Aug.  1,  1903):  288-303. 


japan:  articles  in  peeiodicals 

1904.     The  Japan  of  1903.     .1.  H.  De  Forest. 

tndependent,  vol.  o(!  {Jan.^1,  1904):  127-130. 

1904.     The  religious  awakening  in  Japan.     Kiichi  Kaneko. 
Missionary  renew,  vol.  21  (Jan.,  1904):  41-4^- 

1904.     Japanischer  Nationalcharakter.     Karl  Rathgen. 

Die  Nation  (Berlin),  vol.  21  (Jan.  16,  1904):  244-346. 

1904.     Die  Arbeiterbewegung  im  modernen  Japan.     Gustav  Eckstein. 
Die  Neue  Zeit,  S2.  Jahrgamj  (.Jan.  16-Feb.  20,  1904):  494-603. 

1904.     Le  Japon  industriel.     Francis  Marre. 

Correspondant,  vol.  214  (Feb.  2.5,  1904):  654-662. 

1904.     The  financial  and  economic  situation  in  Japan.     \V.  Petrie  Watson. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  a.,  vol.  75  (Feb.,  1904):  211-2S2. 

1904.     Japan  and  her  people.     Charles  H.  Brent. 

Outlook,  vol.  76  (Feb.  20,  1904):  449-453. 

1904.     Le  panmongolisme  japonais.     Alexandre  Ular. 

La  Renie,  vol.  4S  (Feb.  15,  1904):  413-443. 

1904.     L'Europeanisation  du  Japon.     F^licien  Challaye. 

Revue  de  Paris,  11.  annee,  vol.  1,  pt.  1  (Feb.  1,  1904):  648-672. 

1904.     Our  [Japan's]  ambition.     S.  Shimada. 

Sun  trade  journal,  vol.  10  (Feb.,  1904):  18-21. 

1904.     Au  Japon:  religions  d'hier  et  d'aujourd'hui.     Ch.  Desfontaines. 

A  trarers  le  monde,  vol.  10  (Mar.  26,  1904):  97-100. 

1904.     Scenes  le  la  vie  japonaise.     Pierre  Loti.     [Julien  Viaud.] 

Annales  politirjues  et  Ittteraires,  22.  annee  (Mar.  27,  1904):  195-196. 

1904.     The  hour  of  the  pink  ticket  in  Japan.     Frederick  Palmer. 
Collier'. -i  weekly,  vol.  32  (Mar.  12,  1904):  10-12,  25-28. 

1904.     The  psychology  of  militant  Japan.     E.  H.  Vickers. 

Nation,  vol.  78  (Mar.  3,  1904):  165-166. 

1904.     Le  Japon  et  I'^tranger  d'apres  un  consul  russe.     P.  Camena  d' Almeida. 
Revue  commerciale,  22.  annie  (Mar.  19,  1904):  3. 

1904.     Le  Japon  industriel.     J.  P.  Armand  Hahn. 

Rente  d' economie  politique,  vol.  18  (Mar.,  1904):  230-249. 

1904.     Le  Japon  et  ses  ressources  dans  la  guerre  actuelle.     Pierre  Leroy-Beaulieu. 
Revue  des  deux  mondes,  5.  periode,  vol.  20  (Mar.  15,  1904):  389-419. 

1904.     Every  day  life  in  Japan.     Onoto  Watanna.     {Mrs.  W.  E.  Babcock.] 

Harper's  weekly,  vol.  48  (Ajir.  2,  1904):  500-502,  527,  5S8. 

1904.     Japan's  financial  position.     O.  Eltzbacher. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  (Apr.,  1904):  S43-554- 

1904.     L'expansion  japonaise.     Henri  Cordier. 

Questions  diplomatiques  et  coloniales,  vol.  17  (Apr.  1,  1904):  473-476. 

1904.     Okoubo  Tosimitsi  et  les  origines  du  Japon  actuel.     Louis  Farges. 
Revue  unlrerselle,  vol.  4  (Apr.  1,  1904):  189-190. 
32784—04 3 


33    K 


34  LIBRARY    OF   CONGRESS 

1904.     The  rise  of  modern  Japan.     Jihei  Hashiguchi. 
MoM'swork,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4C'2's-4646. 

1904.     The  genius  of  Japan.     Alexander  Tison. 

]V„rUVx  vork,  vol.  7  {Apr.,  1904):  4699-4701. 

1904.     Fifty  years  of  Japan.     Adachi  Kinnosuke. 

American  monthly  rei'ieir  of  reviews,  vol.  29  (May,  1904):  55S-557. 

1904.     What  the  people  read  in  Japan. 

American  monthly  review  ofreviem,  vol.  S9  (May,  1904):  577-578. 

1904.     Japan's  new  gospel  of  civilization.     Harold  Bolce. 

BdokloierK'  ynagazine,  vol.  S  {June,  1904):  723-742. 

1904.     Marquis  Ito,  the  Japanese  statesman.     John  W.  Foster. 
JatemcUional  quarterly,  vol.  9  (June,  1904):  301-273. 

1904.     First  impressions  of  Japan.     George  Kennan. 

'hitlwk,  vol.  77  (June  11,  1904):  355-360. 

1904.     The  little  brown  men  of  Nippon.     Joaquin  .Miller. 
.Irena,  vol.  32  (July,  1904):  lS-21. 

1904.     The  magna  charta  of  Japan.     Kentaro  Kaneko. 
Century  magazine,  vol.  68  (July,  1904):  484-487. 


%   '' 


KOREA 

Allen,  H.  N.     Korean  tales;  being  a  coUectiijn  of  stories  translated  from  the  Korean 
folk  lore,  together  with  introductory  chapters  descriptive  of  Korea. 
JVeic  York  &  London:  Ci.  P.  Pulnum'ti  sons,  18S9.     (4),  19.1  pp.     12°. 

Bishop,  Isabella  L.  Bird.     Korea  and  her  neighbors;  a  narrative  of  travel,  with  an 
account  of  the  recent  vicissitudes  and  present  position  of  the  country. 
New  York,  [etc.]:  F.  IT.  Revell  company,  1898.     (2),  480  pp.     IHustralions^ 
Plates.    8°. 

Blakeney,  William.     On  the  coasts  of  Cathay  and  Cipango  forty  years  ago.     A  rec- 
ord of  surveying  service  in  the  China,  Yellow  and  .Japan  seas  an<l  on  the 
seaboard  of  Korea  and  Manchuria. 
London:  Elliot  Stock,  1902.     xx,  S53  pp.     Plali-.i.     Foliled  maps.     S°. 

Campbell,  Charles  W.     A  journey  through  North  Korea  to  tlie  Ch'ang-pai  Shan. 

(/tt  Royal  geographical  society.  Proceedings,  vol.  14,  March,  1892.  pp.  Hl-161. 
Folded  map.    London,  1892.    8°.) 

Carles,  William  Richard.     Life  in  Corea. 

Jjondon:  Macmillanandco.,  ISSS.    xii',.il7pp.     J llustralioiu.    Plates.     Folded 
map.     8°. 

Cavendish,  Alfred  Edward  J.    Korea  and  the  sacred  white  mountain;  being  a  brief 
account  of  a  journey  in  Korea  in  1891;  together  with  an  account  of  an 
ascent  of  the  white  mountain,  by  Captain  H.  E.  Goold-Adams. 
London:  George  Philip  &  son,  1894.    224  pp.     Ilhistrations.     Plates  (/tartly  col- 
ored).    Folded  maps.    8°. 

Corea. 

(7n  Australasian  association  for  the  advancement  of  science.  Report  of  the  sixth 
meeting  held  at  Brisbane,  Queensland,  January,  1895,  pp.  483-532.  Plates  (partly 
colored).    Maps.    Sydney,  11S%J.    8°.) 

Contests:  1.  General  paper  on  Corea,  by  Christopher  Thomas  Gardner;  2.  Notes  of 
travels  in  Corea,  by  J.  S.  Gale;  3.  Land  tenure  and  land  tax,  by  J.  H.  Hunt:  4. 
Corean  custom  of  taboo,  by  G.  H.  Jones;  Notes  on  Corean  agriculture,  industries, 
and  social  institutions  ol  Corea,  by  M.  N.  Trollope;  Seven  notes  on  Corea  (Corean 
rivers  and  their  navigability.  Different  kinds  of  and  rotjition  of  crops,  &c.,  &c.),  by 
L.  0.  Warner.  Fauna  of  Corea,  from  "  Korea  and  the  sacred  white  mountain;"'  Con- 
stitution and  government,  by  C.  T.  Gardner. 

Frazar,  Everett.     Korea,  and  her  relations  to  China,  Japan  and  the  United  .States. 
A  paper  read  before  the  New  England  society,  of  Orange,  New  Jersey,  in 
Music  hall,  November  15th,  188;-!. 
Orange,  N.  J.:  Chronicle  hook  and  job  printing  office,  1884.     52  pp.     8°. 

Gale,  James  S.     Korean  sketches. 

New  York,  [rtc.].-  Fleming  H.  Revell  company,  1898.     2.5ij  jip.     Plates.     Por- 
traits.    12°. 

35 


36  LIBRARY    OV    CONGRKSS 

Gifford,  Daniel  L.     Every-day  life  in  Korea;  a  collection  of  studies  and  stories. 

Chicago,  [etc.'}:  F.  H.  Revell  company,  \_189S].    23 J  pp.    Plates.     Folded  map. 

Gilmore,  (ieorge  W.     Korea  from  its  capital:  witli  a  chapter  on  missions. 

I'hiladelphia:  Preshylerian  board  of  publication  and  mbbath-school  work,  \_189S'\. 
SiSpp.     Plates.     12°. 

Oriffis,  William  Elliot.     Corea,  the  hermit  nation.     I. — Ancient  and  medireval  his- 
tory.    II. — Political  and  social  Corea.     III. — Modern  and  recent  history. 
6th  ed.,  revised  and  enlai^ed,  with  additional  chapter  on  Corea  in  1897. 
Sew  York:  C.  Scribtier's  .■lonf,  1S97.     .rx-xi,   (.9),  492  pp.     Frontispiece.     Illus- 
trations.    Maps.     S°. 

■ Corea,  without  and  within:  chapters  on  Corean  history,  mannera  and  relig- 
ion, with  Hendrick  [sic]  Hamel's  narrative  of  captivity  and  travels  in 
Corea,  annotated. 
Philadelphia:    Presbyterian   board   of  publication,    llSSS].     315  pp.     Plates. 
Portraits.     Map.     12°. 

Hamilton,  Angus.    Korea,  with  a  newly  prepared  map  and  numerous  illustrations. 
New  York:  C.  Scribner's  .tons,    1904.     ■clii,   315  pp.     Illustrations.     Map  in 
pocket.    4°. 

The  Korea  review,     [v.  1-3.]    Edited  by  H.  B.  Hulbert. 
Seoul,  Korea,  1901-1903.     3  vols.     S°. 

In  course  of  publication. 

The  Korean  repository. 

[Seoul'i:  1S95-1898.     4  vols.     Plates  {partly  folded) .     8°. 
Library  has  [vols.  2-3]  1895-189i;:  vol.  4,  1897;  vol.  b,  1898. 

Kot6,  Bundjiro,  and  S.  Kanazawa.     A  catalogue  of  the  Romanized  geographical 
names  of  Korea. 
[Tokio]:  Published  by  the  university  of  Tol-yo,  [1903].     {4),  vi,  90, 88pp.     12°. 
Pt.l.  Index  of  the  Romanized  names:  Pt.2.  Index  to  the  names  of  Chinese  characters. 

Iiandor,  A.  Henry  Savage.     Corea  or  Cho-sen,  the  land  of  the  morning  calm. 

London:  Williayn  Heinemann,  1895.    xiii,  (3),  304  J^p.     Illustrations.     Plates. 
Portraits.     8°. 

Iiowell,  Percival.     Choson,  the  land  of  the  morning  calm ;  a  sketch  of  Korea. 

lioflon:  Ticknor  and  company,  18SB.     x,  412  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates  (photo- 
grarures).     Folded  maps.     4°. 

Kiln,  Louise  Jordan.     Quaint  Korea. 

London:  Osgood,  McHvaine  &  CO.,  1895.     viii,  306  pp.     12°. 

Oppert,  Krnest.     A  forbidden  land:  voyages  to  the  Corea.     With  an  account  of  its 
geography,  history,  productions,  and  commercial  capabilities,  &c.,  &C- 
London:  Sampson  Low,  Mnrston,  Searle,  and  Pivington,  1880.     xix,  (1),  349, 
(S)  pp.     lUustralions.     Plates.     Folded  charts.     8°. 

Underwood,  Mrs.  Lillias  Horton.     Fifteen  years  among  the  top-knots;  or,  Life  in 
Korea.     With  introduction  by  Frank  F.  EUinwood. 
Boston,  yurYark,  [etc.']:  American  tract  society,  [_19042.     xviii,  271pp.    Plates. 
Portraits.    8°. 


KOREA:    AKTICLES    IN    PEKIODICALS  37 

TTnited  States.     Bureau  of  slatixHrn.    Commercial  Korea  in  1904.     Area,  popula- 
tion, production,  railways,   telegraphs,   and   transportation  routes,  and 
foreign  commerce,  and  commerce  of  United  States  with  Korea. 
Washington:  Government  printing  office,  1904.  iii,(l),S449-248Spp.   Mapx.  4°. 
Cover-title. 
Reprinted  fibm  the  Monthly  summary  of  commerce  and  finance  for  Jan..  19<M. 

Villetard  de  Liag'uerie,  R.     La  Cor6e,  ind^pendante,  russe,  ou  japonaise. 

Paris:  Hadtetteetci",  1S98.     viii,  304  pp.     Illmtrations  (incl.  portraits).     13°. 

Whigham,  II.  J.     Manchuria  and  Korea. 

London:  Ishitter  and  company,  1904.     (6),  245 pp.     Plates.     Map.     8°. 

KOREA:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 


1897.  Railroads  in  Korea.     .J.  Henry  Dye. 

Railroad  gazette,  vol.  29  {March  12,  1897):  18o,  188-189. 

1898.  The  first  railway  in  Korea. 


A 


Engineering  news,  vol.  40  {Sept.  11,  1898):  1SS-1S4.  ' 

1900.     A  travers  la  Cor^e.     Marcel  Monnier. 

La  geographie,  vol.  1  {Jan.,  1900):  SS-49. 

1900.     Korea — the  hermit  nation.     Harrie  Webster. 

National  geographic  magazine,  vol.  11  {April,  1900):  145-15.5. 

1900.     Korea,  the  pearl  of  the  Orient:  traditional,  historical,  descriptive.     Char- 
lotte M.  Salwey. 
Lnperial  and  Asiatic  quarterly  review,  Sd  series,  vol.  10  {July,  1900):  154-167. 

1903.     The  question  of  Korea.     Alfred  Stead. 

Fortnightly,  n.  s.,  vol.  74  (A'or.,  190-3):  846-863. 
Living  age,  vol.  239  {Dec,  1903):  705-718. 

1903.     The  Korean  question:  Russia  and  Japan. 

Harper's  iveekly,  vol.  47  {Xov.  28,  1903):  1893-1894- 

1903.  Situation  ^conomique  de  la  Cor^e.     Robert  Doucet. 
Monde  economique,  IS.  annee  {Nov.  21,  1903):  647-650. 

1904.  The  crisis  in  the  Far  East:  vaews  and  experiences  in  Korea.     Helen  Gregory- 

Flesher. 
Harper's  weekly,  vol.  4S  {Jan.  SO,  1904):  166-168. 

1904.     La  Cor^e  et  le  conflit  Russo-Japonais.     F.  Le  Beschu. 
Monde  illustrt;  vol.  94  {.Tan.  30.  1904):  84-86. 

1904.     Walking  through  Korea.     T.  Philip  Terry. 
Onting,  vol.  43  {Jan.,  1904):  433-440. 

1904.    La  Cor^e  d'aprte  de  nouvelles  publications.    P.  Camena  d'.\lmeida. 
Revue  commerciale,  22.  annee  {Jan.  23,  1904):  S-4. 

1904.     La  Cor^e.     Victor  B6rard. 

Bevue  de  Paris,  11.  annee  {Jan.  15,  1904):  43S-44S. 

1904.     Situation  politique  et  Economique  actuelle  de  la  Cor^e.     B.  de  Zenzinoff. 
.4  travers  le  monde,  vol.  10  {Feb.  20,  1904):  61-62. 


38  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.     A  travers  la  Cor(?e.     Jean  de  Pange. 

.■i  trwern  le  monde,  vol.   10  (Ffh.  21,   190.',):  65-t;S;   (Mar.  .5,  1904):  7.?-7S; 
(Mar.  12,  1904):  81-84- 

1904.     Korea  as  the  prize  of  war.     J.  Sloat  Fassett. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  39  (Feb.,  1904)':  167-175. 

1904.     La  Coree:  son  gouvemement:  ses  moeurs:  ses  Wgends.     J.  H.  Rosny. 
Annaks i>oltiiques  eHitteraire.f,  22.  anni'e  (Feb.  14,  1904):  99-101. 

1904.     La  Coree:  le  pays:  caracttSre  dea  habitants:  arts  et  manufactures:  gouverne- 
uient:  le  catholicisme  en  Cor^e.     A. -A.  Fauvel. 
Correnpundant,  vol.  214  ( Feb.  10,  1904) :  446-47S. 

1904.     Korea:  the  bone  of  eastern  contention. 

Current  literature,  vol.  36  (Feb.,  1904):  158-163. 

1904.     Yi-Hyeung  empereur  de  Cor^e.     Maxime  de  Merilhan. 
Prance  illnstree,  31.  anm'e  (Feb.  20,  1904):  140-141. 

1904.     Seoul  et  les  Cor^ens.     Li-Tuyen. 

France  illustrie,  31.  annSe  (Feb.  SO,  1904):  141-142. 

1904.     The  fate  of  Korea. 

Harper'^  ireehli/,  vol.  48  (Feb.  20,  1904):  269-270. 

1904.     An  ambition  of  Japan.     A.  M.  Latter. 

Independent  review,  vol.  2  (Feb.,  1904):  117-123. 
Living  age,  vol.  240  (Mar.  12,  1904):  683-667. 

1904.     Current  notes  on  international  law:  Korea.     G.  G.  Phillimore. 
Low  magazine  review,  vol.  29  (Feb.,  1904):  216-217. 

1904.     Some  facts  alwut  Korea. 

National  geographic  magazine,  vol.  15  (Feb.,  1904):  78. 

1904.     Japanese  relations  with  Korea.    Joseph  H.  Longford. 
Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  (Feb.,  1904):  207-218. 
Liring  age,  vol.  240  (Mar.  5,  1904):  577-587. 
Eclectic  magazine,  vol.  142  (Apr.,  1904):  540-550. 

1904.     Korea,  the  cockpit  of  the  East. 

Reviev  of  revieu-x  (London),  vol.  29  (Feb.,  1.W4):  176-181. 

1904.     La  Cor6e.     Villetard  de  Laguerie. 

Revue  des  deux  mondes,  5.  pMode,  vol.  19  (Feb.  1,  1904):  682-696. 

1904.     La  Cor^e.     Matignon. 

Sorivie  des  Hii.des  coloniales  et  mariiimes.     Bulletin,  39.  annie  (Feb.  29,  1904): 
■57-59. 

1904.     La  Cor(;e  &  les  puissances  <''trangeres.     Maurice  CouranL 

Annales  de.i  i<cience.i  politique.^,  vol.  19  (Mar.  15,  1904):  233-267. 

1904.     La  Cor^e  monastique.     Jean  de  Nettancourt-Vaubecourt. 
Monde  illustre,  vol.  94  (Mar.  12,  1904):  234-235. 

1904.     Kim  the  Korean.     William  Elliot  GrifBs. 
Onilook,  vol.  76  (Mar.  5,  1904):  543-549. 


KOREA:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS 


39 


1904.     Japan  and  Korea.  » 

Pilot,  rol.  .9  {Mar.  .5,  1904)--  2U-'21'>. 

1904.     The  Japanese  in  Korea. 

Pilot,  vol.  9  (Mar.  26,  1904):  281-28S. 

1904.     Korean  headdresses  in  the  National  museum.     Foster  H.  Jenings. 

ScieiUiJic  American  supplement,  vol.  57  (Mar.  S6,  1904):  SSeOS-i-SeOS;   (Apr.  2, 
1904):  3S634-2S6S6. 

1904.     Korea  and  the  Far  East  (with  maps). 

Scottish  ijeographical  magazine,  rol.  20  (Mar.,  1904):  157-158. 

1904.     I'n  voyage  en  Coree.     A.  Hagen. 

Tour  da  monde,  vol.  10  (Mar.  19,  1904):  lSS-144;  {Mar.  36,  1904):  145-156. 

1904.     About  Korea.     C.  T.  CoUyer. 

Royal  geographical  society.     Journal,  vol.  23  (April,  1904):  481-492. 

1904.     Korea  and  the  Koreans. 

World's  umk,  (London)  vol.  3  (Apr.,  1904):  445-452. 

1904.     Unhappy  Korea.     Arthur  Judson  Brown. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  68  (May,  1904):  147-150. 

1904.     Korea,  the  bone  of  contention.     Homer  B.  Hulbert. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  68  (May,  1904):  151-154. 

1904.     The  actual  situation  of  Korea.     W.  F.  Sands. 
Messenger,  vol.  41  (May,  1904):  491-496. 

1904.     Falsehood  and  truth  about  Korea  missionaries.     Arthur  Judson  Brown. 

Missionary  review,  vol.  27  (May,  1904):  3.32-3.36. 

1904.     Korea:  its  history  and  prospects.     Walter  C.  Hillier. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  (June  1,  1904):  946-954. 

1904.     Korea,  Japan,  and  Russia,     von  Zepelin. 

American  monthly  revieiv  of  reviews,  vol.  SO  (July,  1904):  98-94. 


RUSSO-JAPANESE  RELATIONS 

Lawrence,  Thomas  J.     War  and  neutrality  in  the  Far  East. 
London:  MncmiUnn  A- rn.,  1904.     340  pp.     13°. 

Japan.      Tmiierinl  diet.     Translation.     Correspondence   regarding   the  negotiations 
between  Japan  and  Russia.     ( 1903-1904.)     Presented  to  the  Imperial  diet, 
:March,  1904. 
[Waxhhigton,  D.  C:  Oih.ton  hrntlu'n,  1904.]     x-ii,  59 pp.     S°. 

RUSSO-JAPANESE  RELATIONS:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1903.     Russia  and  Japan. 

Ounton's  magazine,  vol.  35  (Jubj,  I.'IOS):  16-19. 

1903.     Rn,ssia  and  the  nations.     W.  M.  Ivins,  jr. 

World\-<  work,  vol.  0  {.Tidy,  190.S):  S643-S646. 

1903.     The  cloud  in  the  Far  Ea.st, 

Maanillan' s  magazine,  vol.  8S  {Sept.,  190S):  S54-S6S. 

1903.     The  far  eastern  problem. 

Gunlon's  magazine,  vol.  35  {Oct.,  1903):  313-817. 

1903.     The  storm-cloud  in  the  Far  East.     Charles  Johnston. 
Independent,  vol.  55  (Oct.  15,  1903):  2446-2448. 

1903.     Russia  and  Japan. 

Blackwood's  Edinburgh  magazine,  vol.  174  {Nor.,  1903):  5S.5-600. 

1903.     La  Russie  et  le  Japon. 

Comiti'  df  I' Asie  franraise.     Bulletin  mensuel,  S.  annie  {Nov.,  1903):  4S4-4^6. 

1903.     The  Far  East.     E.  J.  Dillon. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  S4  {Dec,  1903):  885-899. 

1903.     .Tapan  and  Russia. 

Nation,  vol.  77  (Dec.  31,  1903):  519-620. 

1903.  Russia  and  Japan. 

Spectator,  vol.  91  (Dec.  36,  1903):  1116. 

1903-1904.     Asia  in  transition.     W.  C.  Jameson  Reid. 

Gunton's  magazine,  vol.  35  (Dec,  1903):  485-494;  vol.  36  (Jan.,  1904):  39-37; 
(Feb.,  1904):  118-138. 

1904.  Russia  a.  J  Japan:  a  grave  situation.     Albert  Shaw. 
American  monthly  revieiv  of  rex^ews,  vol.  39  (Jan.,  1904):  4-8. 

1904.     The  Russo-Japanese  crisis. 

Collier's  weekly,  vol.  S3  (Jan.  9,  1904):  7-8. 
40 


KTTSSO-JAPANlSSE    RELATIONS;    ARTICLES    IN   PERIODICALS       41 

1904.     The  Russian  and  Japanese  naval  situation.     French  E.  Chad  wick. 

Collier's  ii-eekhi,  ml.  .??  (.Ji„i.  16,  1904):  14-15. 

1904.     Admiral  Alexieff.     William  R.  Stewart. 

Cosmopolitan,  vol.  S6  (Jan.,  1904):  S7 4-376. 

1904.     The  far  eastern  problem.     Alfred  Stead. 

Fortnightly  revieiv,  n.  s.,  vol.  7.5  {Jan.,  1904):  1S7-14^. 

1904.     Russia's  movements  in  the  Far  East.     A.  Maurice  Low. 

Formn,  vol.  35  [Jan.,  1904):  336-34S. 

1904.     The  Russo-Japanese  imbroglio.     Muhammad  Barakatullah. 

Forum,  vol.  35  (Jan.,  1904):  45S-470. 

1904.     The  complications  of  an  eastern  war. 

Independent,  vol.  56  (Jan.  7,  1904):  45-46. 

1904.     Russes  et  Japonais  en  exterme  orient.     F.  Le  Beschu. 

Monde  illmtr!;  vol.  94  (Jan.  16,  1904):  48. 

1904.     La  Russie  et  le  Japon.     Michel  M6ry. 

Mouver)ient  geographique,  31.  annee  (Jan.  10,  1904):  cols.  -20-23. 

1904.     The  Russian  and  Japanese  forces. 

Nation,  vol.  78  (Jan.  14,  1904):  25-26. 

1904.     Der  russisch-japanische  KonHikt.     M.  Beer. 

Nene  Zeit,  22.  Jakrgang  (Jan.  2,  1904):  427-433. 

1904.     The  Russo-Japanese  peril  and  its  bearing  on  Anglo-French  relations.     Fred- 
eric Lees. 
New  liberal  revieiv,  vol.  6  (.Ian.,  1904):  711-721. 

1904.     The  "yellow  peril"  bogey.     Demetrius  C.  Boulger. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  r-ol.  55  (Jan.,  1904):  30-39. 
Living  age,  vol.  S40  (Feb.  6,  1904):  321-329. 

1904.     Japan  and  Russia. 

(Mtlook,  vol.  76  (Jan.  9,  1904):  102-104- 

1904.     Russia  and  Japan  face  to  lace. 

Outlook,  vol.  76  (.Tan.  16,  1904):  161-166. 

1904.     Japan  and  Russia. 

Outlook,  vol.  76  (Jan.  23,  1904):  193-195. 

1904.     La  crise  russo-japonaise.     Robert  de  Caix. 

Questions  diplomatigues  et  colo)nalrs,  vol.  17  (.Ian.  16,  1904):  81-94. 

1904.     La  politique  des  grandes  puissances  en  extreme-orient.     Jean  de  La  Peyre. 
Questions  diplomatiques  et  coloniales,  vol.  17  (Jan.  16,  1904):  IIS-ISI. 

1904.     Etiquette  and  the  East. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  97  (Jan.  23,  1904):  101-102. 

1904.     Russia  and  Japan. 

Spedatw,  vol.  92  (Jan.  16,  1904):  78. 

1904.     The  far-eastern  crisis. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  29  (Feb.,  1904):  131-136. 


42  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.      Russia  and  Japan:  the  naval  outlook.     Active  List. 

Jlhichrwiil' .1  Eilliihiirf/h  man'izine,  i-ol.  175  (Feb.,  1904):  275-293. 

1904.     Russia  and  Japan.     .Inhn  .V.  Kwan. 

Canadian  magazine,  vol.  :iS  (Feb.,  i;t04):  .'iS5-.389. 

1904.     The  war  fleets  of  Japan  and  Russia.     Archibalds.  Tlurd. 

Oi.m,T'!ima(/azi7ie,  ri>l.  25  (Feh.,  1904):  2S7-S1S. 

1904.     .appreciations    of   conditions   in    the    Kusso-Japanese   conflict.     Alfred  T. 
Mahan. 
ColHir'K  weekly,  rot.  S3  {Feb.  20,  1904):  7-S. 

1904.     Russia's  transportation  problem  in  Siberia.     Chase  S.  O.'born. 
Collier'.'!  weekly,  vol.  S2  (Feb.  SO,  1904):  11. 

1904.     The  complete  readiness  of  Japan.     Arthur  May  Knapp. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  S2  (Feb.  20,  1904):  extra  p.  2. 

m 

1904.     The  theatre  of  war.     Cyrus  C.  Adams. 

Collier's  weekly,  vol.  32  (Feb.  20,  1904):  extra  p.  6. 

1904.     On  the  eve  of  war  in  Japan.     Arthur  May  Knapp. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  S2  (Feh.  S7,  1904):  10. 

1904.     .\  nation  calm  and  self-contained.     Frederick  Palmer. 

Collier's  weekly,  vol.  32  (Feb.  27,  1904):  11-12. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise  et  la  politique  de  la  France.     Robert  de  Caix. 
Comile  de  I'Afriquefranraise.     Ihdletin,  14.  nnnie  (Feb.,  1904):  4^^-44. 

1904.     The  Far  East.     E.  J.  Dillon. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  85  (Feb.,  1904):  281-289. 
'*  The  Corean  question  is  vital  to  Japan." 

1904.     Les  6ventualit<!'S  d' extreme-orient.     I.  Le  Japon.     IL  Les  perspective aetu- 
elles.     Paul  Leroy-Beaulieu. 
Economiste fran<;ais,  32.  annie,  vol.  1  (Feb.  6,  1904):  169-171;  (Feb.  13,  1904): 
205-208. 

1904.     La  guerre  en  extreme-orient  et   les  bourses  europ^ennes.     Paul   Leroy- 
Beaulieu. 
Economiste fran(;aig,  32.  attnee,  vol.  1  (Feb.  20,  1904):  S37-SS9. 

1904.     Les  6v6nements  d'orient  et  d'extreme-orient  et  les  bourses  europ^ennea: 
n^cessit^  d'une  p^riode  de  recueillement.     Paul  Leroy-Beaulieu. 

Ecmmmiste franeais,  32.  annee,  vol   1  (Feb.  27,  1904):  273-275. 

1904.     Kir.ut  principles  in  the  Far  East.     Calchas. 

Fortniijhtly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  (Feb.,  1904):  194-210. 

1904.     Russland  und  Japan.     Karl  Schultz. 

riremboten,  63.Jahrgang  (Feb.  11,  1904):  313-326. 

1904.     Some  considerations  of  the  far  eastern  crisis.     Colgate  Baker. 

Independent,  vol.  56  (Feb.  4,  1904):  239-241. 

1904.     Some  lessons  of  the  Japanese  torpedo  attack.     Park  Benjamin. 
Independent,  vol.  56  ( Feb.  is,  1904):  S5S-S56. 

1904.     Circumstances  in  the  Far  East.     A.  J.  Herbertson. 

Independent  review,  vol.  2  (Feb.,  1904):  107-116. 


RUSSO-JAPANESE    RELATIONS:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS      43 

1904.      La  guerre  russo-japanaise.     F.  Le  Beschu. 

Monde  illuslri,  vol.  94  {Feb.  20,  1904):  15S. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise  et  sea  consequences.     Ainbroiae  Rendu. 

Moniteur  industriel,  31.  annce  ( Feb.  20,  1904) :  113-114. 

1904.     The  crisis  in  the  Far  East.     Robert  Machray. 

Monthlij  renew,  ml.  14  (Feb.,  1904):  27-4-!. 

1904.     Tlie  eastern  crisis  and  its  origin.     K.  H.  N'iclsers. 
Nation,  vol.  78  {Feb.  11,  1904):  lOo-lOn. 

1904.     Japanese  and  Russian  finances. 

Nation,  vol.  78  {Feb.  33,  1904):  I43-I44. 

1904.     Der  Kriege.     P.  Nathan. 

Nation  {Berlin),  21.  Jalmjang  {Feb.  IS,  1904):  307-308. 

1904.     Russia  and  Japan.     By  the  Bystander. 

New  liberal  ret'ieir,  vol.  7  {Feb.,  1904):  62-68;   {April,  1904):  335-S40. 

1904.     Tiie  far  eastern  situation.     Edwin  Maxey. 

Orerland  monthly,  n.s.,  vol.  43  {Feb.,  1904):  IIO-I14. 

1904.     The  Russo-Japanese  conflict. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  36  {Feb.  18,  1904):  201-203;   {Feb.  26,  1904):  233-SS4. 

1904.     Europe  and  tlie  war. 

I'uliUc  opinion  {London),  vol.85  {Feb.  26,  I904):  253-257. 

1904.     La  France  et  la  guerre.     Robert  de  Caix. 

Questions  diplomatique/  el  eoloniales,  vol.  17  {Feb.  15,  1904):  225-232. 

1904,     Le  reveil  de  I'Asie  et  le  mouvement  pan-asiatique.     Argus. 

Question.'!  diphmvttiqueis  et  eoloniales,  vol.  17  {Feb.  IS,  1904):  266-271. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise. 

Questions  diplomatiques  el  eoloniales,  vol.  17  {Feb.  15,  1904):  272-288. 

1904.     The  railways  at  the  seat  of  war. 

Railway  world,  vol.  4S  {Feb.  20,  1904):  199-200. 

1904.     Les  int^reta  fran^ais  en  extreme-orient.     Henri  Lorin. 

Revue  commerdale,  22.  annie  {Feb.  13,  1904):  3. 

1904.     Les  finances  com  parses  de  la  Russie  et  du  Japon. 
Eevue  de  slatistique,  vol.  7  {Feb.  I4,  1904):  50-65. 

1904.     La  lutte  pour  le  Paciflque.     Ren^  Pinon. 

Hevue  des  deu.c  mondes,  5.  periode,  vol.  19  {Feb.  15,  1904):  772-807. 

1904.     [La  guerre  en  extreme-orient].     Francis  Charmes. 

Revtie  des  deux  mondes,  5.  periode,  vol.  19  {Feb.  15,  1904):  947-95S. 

1904.     Marines  russe  et  japonaise.     C.  Cilvanet. 

Revue fran(;aise,  vol.  \^9  {Feb.,  I904):  97-111. 

1904.     Le  conflit  russo-japanais.     .Vlexandre  Chariot. 
Revue  generate,  vol.  79  {Feb.,  1904):  330-342. 

1904.     La  guerre  fatale.     B.  de  Zenzinoff. 

Revue  politique  et  litteraire,  5.  see.,  vol.  1  {Feb.  20,  1904):  237-241. 


44 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1904.     Britain  and  the  far  eastern  question. 

n^islminsler  rcfiew,  vol.  161  {Feb.,  1904):  117-119. 

1904.     The  conflict  in  the  Far  East.     Alfretl  Stead. 

World' s  work  {London),  vol.  .?  {Feb.,  1904):  240-344. 

1904.     1-tiissia,  Japan,  and  who  else?     Edwin  Maxey. 

Albany  kw journal,  vol.06  {Mar.,  1904):  71-73. 

1904.     L'arni(?e  japonaise.     B. 

AnndUs  de»  sciences  politiques,  vol.  19  {Afar.  1.5,  1904):  SS6-25S. 

1904.     The  opening  of  the  war.     Active  List. 

lilackvood' s  Edinburgh  magazine,  vol.  17.'>  {Mar.,  1904):  438-448. 

1904.     Causes  de  la  guerre  russo-japonaise.     Comte  de  Fontaine  de  Resbecq. 
Camel,  vol.  19  {Mar.,  1904):  371-.f7S. 

1904.     Economic  changes  in  Asia.     Arthur  Judson  Brown. 
Century  magazine,  vol.  67  {Mar.,  1904):  732-737. 

1904.     The  making  of  the  Japanese  soldier.     Durham  White  Stevens. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  33  {Mar.  .5,  1904):  7-8. 

1904.     Russia  calls  out  her  Baltic  fleet.     Cyrus  C.  Adams. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  32  {Mar.  5,  1904):  extra  p.  13. 

1904.     The  battle  of  Port  Arthur.     James  F.  J.  Archibald. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  33  {Mar.  36,  1904):  7. 

1904.     Japan  and  Russia.     E.J.Dillon. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  S5  {Mar.,  1904):  305-323. 

"Mr.  Dillon'.s  knowledge  of  Russia  is  so  extensive  that  his  article  on  Japan  and  Russia 
in  the  current  Contemporary  claims  special  attention.  The  object  of  his  paper  is  to 
fix  the  responsibility  of  the  war.  Dismissing  the  Russian  people  and  the  professional 
diplomats,  he  comes  to  the  conclusion  that  the  appointmentof  .admiral  Alexeiefl  as 
Viceroy  of  the  Fur  East  was  a  huge  blunder,  and  that  the  supersession  of  wiser  and 
more  cautious  statesmen  by  a  zealous  but  inexperienced  sailor  precipitated  the 
crisis."— Spfc(a(or.  Mar.  .5, 190!,:  576. 

1904.     Ce  que  coutera  la  guerre  russo-japonaise  pour  une  campagne  de  six  moia 
d'apres  des  documents  in(?dits. 
Correspondant,  vol.  314  {Mar.  25,  1904):  1025-1041. 

19C4.     The  war  and  the  powers.     Calchas. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  «.,  vol.  75  {Mar.  1,  1904):  415-430. 
Living  age,  vol.  241  {Apr.  2,  1904):  1-13. 

"  'Calchas '  sums  up  the  results  of  the  war  strategically,  and  points  out  what  he  believes 
to  have  been  Russia's  best  course  when  she  found  herself  attacked  and  unpre 
pared."— .Speclntor,  Mar.  5,  1901,:  377. 

1904.     The  war  in  the  Far  East.     Alfred  Stead. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  «.,  vol.  75  (Mar.  1,  1904):  431-444- 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise.     .\rdouin-Dumazet  et  Paul  Fontin. 
France  de  demain,  n.  s.,  vol.  1  {Mar.  5,  1904):  3-19. 

1904.     Leaders  in  the  Far  eastern  conflict. 

Independent,  vol.  56  {Mar.  31,  1904):  701-708. 

1904.     Along  the  Yalu  river.     Margherita  Arlina  Hamm. 
Independent,  vol.  66  {Mar.  31,  1904):  709-714- 


RUSSO-JAPANESE   RELATIONS:     ARTICLES    IN   PERIODICALS      45 

1904.     Russia's  plan  to  exhaust  her  foe. 

Literary  dirjent,  vol.  S8  (Mar.  IS,  1904):  S7 4-376. 

1904.     A  plain  statement  about  Russia  and  Japan.     Frederick  McCormick. 
Metropolitan  magazine,  vol.  19  {Mar.,  1904):  883-889. 

1904.     Manchuria  and  Korea. 

National  geographic  magazine,  vol.  13  {March,  1904):  128-129. 
Accompanying  is  a  war  map  of  Manchuria  and  Korea,  36  b.v  42  inches. 

1904.     The  collapse  of  Russia  in  the  Far  East.     Ignotus. 
National  review,  vol.  4S  {Mar.,  1904):  29-.S4. 

1904.     Some  French  opinions  on  the  Russo-Japanese  conflict.     Frederic  Lees. 

New  liberal  review,  vol.  7  {Mar.,  1904):  181-1S9. 

1904.     Why  Japan  resists  Russia.     Kogoro  Takahira. 

North  American  review,  vol.  178  {Mar.,  1904):  321-327. 

1904.     England  and  the  war.     Sydney  Brooks. 

North  American  reiiew,  vol.  17S  {Mar.,  1904):  328-337. 

1904.     What  defeat  would  mean  to  Russia.     Wanda  lan-Ruban. 

Oiitlonl;  vol.  7fi  {Mar.  Hi,  1904):  687-694. 

1 904      La  si  tuation  en  extreme-orient :  les  faits  et  les  perspectives.     Rol)ert  de  Caix. 

Questions  diplomatiques  et  cohmiales,  vol.  17  {Mar.  1,  1904):  30-5-311. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise  et  ses  lemons.     Jean  de  La  Peyre. 

Quextions  diplomatirjiies  et  coloniales,  vol.  17  {Mar.  1,  1904):  321-SS6;  {Mar.  16, 
1904):  407-41S;  {Apr.  1,  1904):  489-501. 

1904.     Port-Arthur.     H.  T. 

(iueslions  diplomatiques  et  coloniales,  vol.  17  {Mar.  1,  1904):  S37-S40. 

1904.     The  struggle  over  Korea.     Robert  E.  Speer. 

Record  of  Chri.^ian  work,  vol.  23  {Mar.,  1904):  155-159. 

1904.     Russo-Japanese  war:  an  authoritative  statement  of  both  sides  of  the  case. 
I.  The  Japanese  case.     IL  The  Russian  case. 
Review  of  reiietvs  {London),  vol.  29  {Mar.,  1904):  231-239. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise. 

Rome  de  geographic,  3S.  annee  {Mar.  1,  1904):  65-^9. 

1904.     Le  confiit  russo-japonais.     Francis  Mury. 

Revue  de  giographie,  28.  annee  {Mar.  1,  1904):  70-77. 

1904.     L'attaque  de  Port-Arthur— 8  fevrier  1904.     Lieutenant  X. 
Revue  de  Paris,  11.  annee,  vol.  2,  {Mar.  15,  1904):  1-14. 

1904.     Obligation  juridique  de  la  declaration  de  guerre.     H.  Ebren. 

Revue  gtnhale  de  droit  international  public,  11.  annie  {Mar.-Apr.,  1904):  13S- 
148. 

1904.     Les  hostilit^s  sans  declaration  de  guerre.     A  propos  d"  la  guerre  russo- 
japonaise.     F.  de  Martens. 
Revue  genirale  de  droit  international  puhlic,  11.  annee  {Mar.-Apr.,  1904):  148- 
■150. 


46  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.     La  gwerre  russo-japonaise  et  I'alliance  fraiicorusse.     .lean  Jauiis. 
Rerne  KOcinUnle,  i-nl.  SO  {Mar.,  1904):  SOo-UVJ. 

1904.     Le  i-uiiHit  russo-japonais.     C.  B^guin. 

Rerue  uniier»elle,  vol.  4  {March  1,  1904):  U 1-124. 

1904.     Vladisvostock,  Port  Arthur,  TchemouliM>. 

Remte  imirertelle,  vol.  4  (March  1,  1904):  lUS-lBS. 

1904.     The  war  in  the  Far  East.     P.  Kropotkin. 
Speaker,  vol.  9  {Mar.  5,  1904):  544-S.iG. 
Living  age,  vol.  S41  (Apr.  9,  1904):  121-120. 

1904.     La  Kiierre  ni.'i.ao-japonaise:  I'attaqueet  la  defense  desc^tes.     Gaston  Jougla. 
T'lV  illiiKln'r,  7.  nnni-e  (Mar.  11,  1904):  S72-.S77. 

1904.     Korea,  Japan,  and  Russia.     Robert  E.  Speer. 
World's  work,  vol.  7  {Mar.,  1904):  4-514-4-'iS6. 

1904.     The  war — and  after.     Henry  Norman. 

World'n  work  (Loudon),  vol.  3  (Mar.,  1904):  S2SS29. 

1 904.     The  struggle  for  the  Pacific. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  29  (Apr.,  1904):  4S4-4S5. 
Review  of.  La  lutte  pour  la  Pacifique  by  Rene  Piiion. 

1904.     Japan  is  prepared  for  a  long  war.     Frederick  Palmer. 
(Jollier's  weekly,  vol.  S3  (Apr.  9,  1904):  6-7. 

1904.     Appreciationof  conditions  in  the  Russo-Japanese  conflict.    AlfredT.  Mahau. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  S3  {Apr.  30,  1904):  10-13. 

1904.     Japan  and  Russia  [Russia's  prospects  of  success].     E.  J.  Dillon. 
Contemporary  review,  vol.  S5  (Apr.,  1904):  577-591. 

1904.     The  beginning  in  the  Far  East.     David  Hannay. 
Cornkill  magazine,  vol.  16  {Apr.,  1904):  5S.3-.535. 

1 904.     Rus.sia  and  the  war.     (Edipus. 

Forlnlyhtly  rei'iev:,  n.  «.,  vol.  75  (Apr.,  1904):  547--'>60. 

1904.     Port  Arthur — Its  strategic  value.     Angus  Hamilton. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  (Apr.,  1904):  662-^69. 

1904.     Les  Cosaques.     Kto-to. 

France  de  demain,  n.  s.,  vol.  I  (Apr.  20,  1904):  205-21S. 

1904.     The  case  for  Japan.     D.  AV.  Stevens. 

Frank  Leslie' s  popular  monthly,  vol.  57  (Apr.,  1904):  090-696. 

1904.     The  war  and  the  two  civilisations.     A.  M.  Latter. 
hidependenl  review,  vol.  2  (April,  1904):  348-359. 

1904.     The  destiny  of  the  Far  East.     Alexander  Hume  Ford. 
Mnnsey's  magazine,  vol.  SI  (Apr.,  1904):  1-11. 

1904.     New  stars  rise  above  the  Pacific.     Peter  Mac  Queen. 

National  magazine  (Boston),  vol.  20  (Apr.,  1904):  79-82. 

1904.     Sea  power  and  strategy.     T.  Miller  Maguire. 
National  review,  vol.  43  (April,  1904):  263-274. 

1904.     Russia's  charge  against  Japan.     Sir  F.  Maurice. 

Nineteenth  century  and  ajter,  vol.  55  {Apr.,  1904):  676-684. 


RISSO-JAPANESK    RELATKJXS:      ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS       47 

1904.     The  causes  of  the  Russo-Japanese  war.     Frank  Brinkley.  > 

Outlook,  vol.  76  (Apr.  16,  1904):  921-9S7.  jji 

1904.     Russia  and  Japan. 

Quarterly  review,  vol.  199  {Apr.,  1904):  576-610. 

1904.     La  croix-rouge  en  Russie  et  au  Japon.     Maurice  Buret. 

Questions  diplomatiques  et  coloniales,  vol.  17  {Apr.  1,  1004):  502-509. 

1904.     Tchemoulpo  et  Vladivostock.     Lieutenant  X. 

Jierue  ih  Fari.%  11.  annve,  vol.  2  {Apr.,  1904):  650-668. 

1904.     La  revolte  de  I'Asie.     Victor  B^rard. 

Reme  de  Pnri.-i,  11.  annee,  vol.  3  (April  15,  1904):  867-890;  11.  annee,  vol.  S 
(May  15,  1904):  409-44S. 

1904.     The  naval  situation  in  the  East. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  97  {Apr.  33, 1904):  5L.i-514. 

1904.     The  war  and  the  chances  of  inten-ention. 
Spectator,  vol.  93  (.4/>r.  SO,  1904):  685-686. 

1904.     What  Japan  is  fighting  for.     Kogoro  Takahira. 
World's  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4630-4633. 

1904.     The  cost  of  war  to  Russia  and  Japan.     Frank  A.  Vanderlip. 

World'.':  vork,  ml.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4647-4650. 

1904.     Stories  of  Russian  and  Japanese  soldiers. 

World's  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4658-4675. 

1904.     The  rebound  on  Russia.     Gilson  Willets. 

World's  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4683-4698. 

1904.     The  cause  of  the  war.     John  Foord. 

World's  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  470.5-4709. 

1904.     What  Russia  fights  for.     Edwin  Winthrop  Dayton. 
World's  work,  vol.  7  {Apr.,  1904):  4710-4713. 

1904.     Will  Russia  use  the  Xorth-east  passage?     Frederick  T.  Jane. 
World's  work  (London),  vol.  3  (Apr.,  1904):  4-^3-435. 

1904.     Vice-admiral  Togo:  a  type  of  the  Japanese  fighting  man.     Ilirata  Tatauo. 
American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  39  (ifay,  1904):  551-553. 

1904.     Japan  on  the  American  attitude. 

Amerxran  monthly  review  oj  revieiva,  rol.  39  (May,  1904):  578-580. 

1904.     The  effect  of  the  war  on  the  international  affairs  of  Russia. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  39  (May,  1904):  680-581. 

1904.     Climatic  features  of  the  field  of  the  Russo-Japanese  war.     Fran     WaMo. 
American  monthly  review  oj  reviews,  rol.  39  (May,  1904):  583~'>S4. 

1904.     If  Japan  should  win.     Harold  Bolce. 

Booklorers'  magazine,  vol.  3  (May,  1904):  579-598. 

1904.     Torpedo  craft  IS.  battleships.     Alfred  T.  Mahan. 
Collier's  weekly,  vol.  S3  (May  31,  1904):  16-17. 

1904.     Japan,  Russia,  France.     Ivanovich. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  85  {May.  1904):  668-683. 


48  LIKKARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.     Problems  of  the  Far  East,     .\llml  .Steiul. 

Furliiirihlhj  review,  n.  ».,  vol.  75  (Mail.  1904):  817^29. 

1904.     Some  questions  of  international  law  arisinj^  from  the  Ku.-^.io-JaiJaneso  war. 
Amos  S.  Hershey. 
Greeii  bag,  vol  16  (May-July,  1904):  SOR,  375,  4Sg. 

1904.     Russia  anil  Japan.     Frank  Brinkley. 

Nalional  review,  vol.  4S  {Mai/,  1904):  393-405. 

1904.     Russia  in  the  Far  East.     A  statement  to  the  "North  American  review. 
Comte  Cassini. 
North  American  review,  vol.  178  (Ma/i,  1904):  6S1-GS9. 

1904.     Japan  and  Korea:  why,  in  the  light  of  history,  Japan  is  fighting  for  Korea. 
Colgate  Baker. 
Pearson's  magazine,  vol.  11  (May,  1904):  470-478. 

1904.     La  crise  d'extr^'me-orient.     Paul  Doumer. 

Rente  eronomif/tw  internationale,  vol.  1  (Mail,  1904):  673-597. 

1904.     La  guerre  russo-japonaise  et  ses  lemons.     Jean  de  La  Peyre. 

Questians  diplomatii/ties  et  coloniales,  ml.  17  (May  1,  1904):  664S74;   (May  16, 
1904):  735-735. 

1904.     The  position  of  Russia.     Henry  Norman. 

WorhVs  work  (London),  vol.  3  (May,  1904):  6S9-5SS. 

1904.     Russian  finance:  the  gold  reserve.     Henry  Norman. 
World's  work  (London),  vol.  3  (May,  1904):  5SS-535. 

1904.     Some  of  the  issues  of  the  Russo-Japanese  conflict.     K.  Asakawa. 
Yale  review,  vol.  13  {May,  1904):  16-50. 

1904.     International  aspects  of  the  Russo-Japanese  war.     T.  Baty. 
Alliany  law  journal,  vol.  66  (June,  1904):  189-190. 

1904.     A  question  of  staying  power:    the  comparative   resources  of  Russia  and 
Japan.     N.  T.  Bacon. 

Booklovers'  magazine,  vol.  3  (Jane,  1904):  743-74S. 

1904.     Japan's  object-lessons  in  naval  warfare.     Excubitor. 
Fortnightly  reviev),  n.  s.,  vol.  75  (June  1,  1904):  931-945. 

1904.     The  war  in  the  Far  East.     Alfred  Stead. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  (June  1,  1904):  955-965. 

1904.     The  ('onflict  of  new  world-forces  in  the  Far  East.     Valentine  Chirol. 
National  review,  vol.  43  (June,  1904):  578-596. 

1904.     The  Russo-Japanese  war  and  European  opinion. 

American  monthly  review  of  revie^os,  vol.  30  (July,  1904):  87-90. 

1904.     Japan  at  war.     E.  Emerson.  » 

Contemporary  rei'iew,  vol.  86  (.luly,  1904):  6-17. 

1904.     The  war:  Korea  and  Russia.     Alfred  Stead. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  «.,  vol.  76  (.My,  1904):  90-10.?. 

1904.     International  questions  and  the  present  war. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  56  (July,  1904):  142-151. 

1904.     The  i-ourse  of  the  war.     Henry  Norman. 
World's  work,  vol.  4  (July,  1904):  109-112. 


FAR  EAST:  AMERICAN  RELATIONS 

Adams,  Brooks.     America's  economic  supremacy. 

New  York:  The  Maanillan  nimpaiii/,  1900.     82S pp.     13°. 

Contents:  The  Spanish  war  and  tlie  equilibrium  of  the  world:  The  new  struggle  for 
life  among  nations;  England's  decadence  in  the  West  Indies:  Natural  selection  in 
literature:  The  decay  of  England:  Rus.sia's  interest  in  China. 

The  new  empire. 

Xew  York:  Ihe  Macmillan  company,  1902.    xxxiA,  {2),243  pp.     Folded  maps. 


American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     The  foreign  policy  of  the 
United  .State.*:  political  and  Cdmmercial.     Addresses  and  discussions  at 
the  annual  meeting,  April  7-8,  1899. 
Philadelphia:  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science,  1899.     {4),  316 
pp.     8°. 

The  commercial  relations  of  the  United  States  with  the  Far  East,  by  Worthington 

Chauncey  Ford,  pp.  107-130. 
The  commercial  relations  of  the  United  States  with  the  Far  East,  by  Robert  T  Hill; 

irith  a  discussion  by  John  Foord.  Dr.  W.  P.  Wilson,  Prof.  E.  R.  Johnson,  pp.  131-160. 
The  political  relations  of  the  United  States  with  the  Far  East,  by  John  Bassett  Moore, 

pp.  163-167. 
China's  relations  with  the  West,  by  Wu  Ting-fang,  pp.  16.S-176. 
The  political  relations  of  the  United  States  with  the  European  powers  in  the  Far  East, 

by  Lindley  Miller  Keasbey,  pp.  177-183. 
The  real  menace  of  Russian  aggression,  by  Frederick  Wells  Williams,  pp.  184-197. 


Bancroft,  Hubert  Howe.     The  new  Pacific. 

New  York:  The  Baneroft  company,  1900. 


{2),  738 pp.     Map.     8°. 


Beresford,  Lord  Charles.     China  and  the  powers. 

(7h  The  Crisis  in  China,  pp.  169-185.    New  York,  1900.    12°) 


Hi,    (5),    .^'.5,    (/)    pp. 


Beveridge,  Albert  Jeremiah.     The  Russian  advance. 

New    York  and   London:  Harper   A   brothers,    1903. 
Maps.  -8°. 

American  needs  in  the  Orient,  pp.  173-186. 

American  progress  in  the  Far  East,  pp.  187-207. 

Russial*  opinions  of  American  institutions,  pp.  385-400. 

Appendi.x:  Treaty  of  Shimonoseki,  by  which  southern  Manchuria  was  ceded  to  Japan. 
Mikado's  rescript  withdrawing  from  Manchuria.  The  (reputed)  Cassini  convention. 
The  Russo-Manchurian  railway  agreement.  Anglo-Russian  agreement  respecting 
spheres  of  influence  in  China.  Treaty  of  offensive  and  defensive  alliance  between 
Great  Britain  and  Japan.  Specimen  of  the  regulations  concerning  foreign  joint 
stock  companies  operating  in  Russia. 

Boulger,  Demetrius  C.     America's  share  in  a  partition  of  China. 

(7;i  The  CrLsis  in  China,  pp. '215-2:55.    New  York.  1900.    1'.'°.) 

Callahan,  James  Morton.     American  relations  in  the  Pacific  and  the  Far  East, 
1784-1900. 
Baltimore:    The  .Tohn.i  Hopkins  press,  1901.      177  pp.     8°.      {.Tohns  Hopkins 
unirersity  studies  in  historical  and  political  science,  series  xijc  nvs.  1-3.) 
32784—04 4  49 


50  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Colquhoun,  Archibald  Koss.     Greatir  Aim'iira. 

New    York  and  London:    Harper  cO  brothers,  1904-      i'',    (^)i  4S5,    (/)  pp. 
Prontinpiece  (portrait).     Maps.     Diagrams.     S°. 

The  Far  Kastern  crisis. 

(/n  The  Crisis  ill  Chiim,  pp.  109-134.    New  York,  1900.    V2°.) 

The  mastery  of  the  Pacific. 

New    York;   Lundon:    The    }[aciiiitlaii   eo.,   1902.     xvi,  440  pp.     Ilhinlrdlinnn. 
Plates.     Maps.    .s'°. 

Contents:  Introduction.— Tlic  Uuiteil  Slates  in  the  Pacific— Great  Britain  in  the 
Pacific— The  Dutcli  in  tlie  Pacific— Japan  in  the  Pacific— Other  powers  in  the 
Pacific — Conclusion. 

Conant,  Charles  A.     The  United  States  in  the  Orient.     The  nature  of  the  economic 
problem. 
New  York:  Honghtfin,  Mifflin  A-  <■<>.,  1900.     (2),  x,  237  pp.     S°. 

Dilke,  .S»  Charles  W.     The  American  policy  in  China. 

(/«  The  Crisis  in  China,  pp.  a-bVari.    New  Yorli,  1900.    ia°.) 

Foster,  John  W.     .\merican  diplomacy  in  the  Orient. 

Boston  and  Neir  York:  Ifougliton,  Mifflin  and  conipanii,  190.3.  .cir,  498  jjp.  S°. 
Contents:  Karly  European  relations;  America's  first  intercourse;  The  first  Chinese 
treaties;  Independent  Hawaii,  The  opening  of  Japan;  The  transformation  of  Japan; 
The  crumhling  wall  oi  China;  Chinese  immigration  and  exclusion;  Korea  and  its 
neighbors;  The  enfranchisement  of  Japan;  The  annexation  of  Hawaii;  The  Samoan 
complication;  The  Spanish  war:  its  result.s.  Appendix:  Protocol  between  China  and 
the  treatypowers,  Sept.  7, 1901;  The  emigration  treaty  between  China  an<l  the  United 
States,  1S94;  Treaty  between  the  Cnited  States  and  Japan,  1894:  Joint  resolution  for 
annexing  the  Hawaiian  islands,  1.S9S;  Tlie  Samoan  treaty  between  the  United  States, 
Germany,  and  Great  Britain,  1899;  Protocol  between  the  United  States  and  Spain, 
August  12, 1898;  Treaty  of  peace  between  the  United  States  and  Spain,  1898. 

Griffis,  AVilliani  Elliot.     America  in  the  East;   a  glance  at  our  history,  prospects, 
problems,  and  duties  in  the  I'acitic  Ocean. 
New  York:  .{.  S.  Barnes  &  CO.,  1809.    x,  {3),  344  pp.    Plates.    Portraits.    12°. 

Nitobe,  Inazo  Ota.     The  intercotir.se  between  the   United  States  and  .Japan:    an 
historical  .sketch. 
Baltimore:  The  ,7ohns  Hopkins  press,  1891.     ix,  198  pp.     8°.     [Johns  Hopkim 
university  studies  in  liistorical  and  political  science.     Extra  vol.  riii.) 

Potter,  Henry  Codman.     The  East  of  to-day  and  to-morrow. 
New  York:  Tlie  Century  co.,  1902.      (8),  190  pp.     12°. 

Contents:  Chinese  traits  and  western  blunders.— The  problem  of  the  Philippines.— 
Impressionsof  Japan. — Impressions  of  India. — Impressions  of  the  Hawaiian  Islands. — 
India:  its  people  and  its  religions. 

Keinsch,  Paul  Samuel.     World  politics  at  the  end  of  the  nineteenth  century;  as 
influenced  by  the  oriental  situation. 
Neiv   York  &  London:    The  Macniillan  co.,  1900.     .xiiii,  SiM  pp.     Map.     12°. 
( The  citizen's  library. ) 

Contents:  National  imperialism;  The  opening  of  China;  The  consequences  of  the 
opening  of  China  in  world  politics;  German  imperial  politics;  Some  considerations 
on  the  position  of  the  United  States  as  a  factor  in  oriental  politics. 

Waldstein,  Charles.     The  expansion  of  Western  ideals  and  the  world's  peace. 
,hihn  Lane,  New  York  and  London,  1899.     194  pp.     1S°. 


SELECT   LIST   OF   BOOKS   ON    B'AR   EAST:    AMERICAN    RKLATIONS         51 

■Wilson,  James  H.     America's  interests  in  China. 

(Ill  The  Crisis  in  China,  pp.  239-2fil.    New  York,  1900.    12°.) 

Wu  Tingr-fang.     Mutual  helpfulness  between  China  and  the  United  States. 

( In  The  Crisis  in  China,  pp.  189-211.    New  York,  1900.    12°.) 


FAR  EAST:  AMERICAN  RELATIONS:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 

1898.     American  competition  with  British  trade  in  Japan. 

Iliiiirdnf  trwU: journal,  vol.  25  [July,  1898):  4S-4S. 

1898.     Our  policy  in  China.     Mark  B.  Bunnell. 

North  American  review,  vol.  167  [Oct.,  1898):  S9.S-409. 

1898.  Eastward  expansion  of  the  United  States.     A.  R.  Colquhoun. 

Harpn-'x  uetv  monthbi  magazine,  vol.  97  {Nov.,  1898):  9.33-938. 

1898-1899.     America  in  the  Far  East.     W.  E.  Griffis. 

Oiillook,  vol.  GO  {Nov.  26,  1898):  761-766;  {Dec.  10,  1898):  902-907;  {Dec.  24, 
1898):  100.',-1011;  {Dec.  SI,  1898):  1051-1057;  vol.  61  {Jan.  14,  1899):  110- 
IIS. 

1899.  American  interests  in  the  Far  East.     John  Foord. 

A II filo- American  magazine,  vol.  1  {Jan.,  1899):  1-14. 

1899.     The  commercial  future.     The  new  strufigle  for  life  amon<r  nation.?.     Brooks 
Adams. 
Fortnighllij  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  65  (Feb.,  1899):  -'74-283. 

1899.     The  new  struggle  for  life  among  nations.     Brooks  Adams. 

MrClnre'x  magazine,  vol.  12  (.\pr.,  1899):  558-564. 

1899.     The  commercial  relations  of  the  United  States  with  thr  Far  Ea.«t.     Worth- 
ington  Chauncey  Ford. 
Aiiiericiin  acadeiny  of  political  and  social  science.     Annah,  Supplement  to  May, 
1899:  107-160. 

1899.     American  policy  in  the  Far  East.     J.  M.  King,  jr. 

Anglo-Americnyi  magazine,  vol.  1  {May,  1899):  432-439. 

1899.     Relation  of  the  United  States  to  Asiatic  politics.     J.  B.  Moore. 
Independent,  vol.  61  {May  4,  1899):  1206. 

1899.     .'Jhall  the  United  States  unite  with  England  or  Russia. 
Jiidcpendenl,  vol.  .51  (Jidy  13,  1899):  1895. 

1899.     The  paramount  power  of  the  Pacific.     John  Barrett. 
North  American  revieu;  vol.  169  {Aug.,  1899):  165-179. 

1890.     America,  England,  and  Germany  as  allies  for  the  open  door,    John  Barrett. 
Engineering  magazine,  vol.  17  {Sept.,  1899):  893-902. 

1809.     America  and  England  in  the  East.     Sir  Charles  W.  Uilke. 
North  American  review,  vol.  169  {Oct.,  1899):  SS8-66S. 

1901.     American  interests  in  the  Orient.     Charles  A.  Conant. 
International  monthly,  vol.  3  {Feb.,  1901):  117-133. 


52  LIBRARY   OF   CONGRESS 

1903.     The  status  of  the  Unitetl  States  in  the  Orient.     John  Barrett. 
Independent,  vol.  .55  (Apr.  i/S,  1903):  952-953. 

1903.     The  Asiatic  problem  awl  its  relation  to  the  United  States.    W.  C.  Jameson 
Keid. 
Political  scienrr  quarterhj,  vol.  18  (June,  190S):  181-196. 

1903.  The  reojjenud  <loor. 

Nation,  vol.  77  [July  23,  1903):  65-66. 

1903-1904.     Japan  and  the  United  States:  a  jiroposed  economic  alliance.     Kentaro 
Kaneko. 
Intcrnalional  quarterly,  vol.  S  (Dec-Mar.,  1003-1904):  399-404- 

1904.  American  interests  in  Asia. 

Outlook,  vol.  76  (Jan.  23,  1904):  S05-S06. 

1904.     Pourquoi  les  sympathies  des  ilfctats-Unia  vont  au  Japon. 
A  Iravers  le  monde,  vol.  10  (Mar.  IS,  1904):  86-87. 

1904.     America's  opportunity  in  the  East.     Harold  Bolce. 
Bookhvers'  magazine,  vol.  3  (Mar.,  1904):  S87S09. 

1904.     The  coming  conflict  from  an  American  standpoint.     Hugo  Erickson. 

Orerland  monthly,  n.  s.,  vol.  43  (Mar.,  1904):  204-206. 

1904.     The  coming  of  the  Russian  ships  in  1863.     Rush  C.  Hawkins. 
North  American  review,  vol.  178  (Apr.,  1904):  539-544. 

1904.     Russia:  our  friend  in  need.     John  S.  Cooper. 

Saturday  evening  post,  vol.  176  (April  9^  1904):  1-2. 

1904.     Our  trade  in  the  war  zone.     O.  P.  Austin. 
World's  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4650-4654. 

1904.     The  wtory  of  our  eastern  diplomacy. 

^^'orld'8  work,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1904):  4675-4679. 

1904.     Japan  on  the  American  attitude.     A.  K. 

American  monthly  review  ofrevieics,  vol.  29  (May,  1904):  578-580. 

1904.     Russia  and  ourselves. 

Outlook,  vol.  13  (May  7,  1904):  S45. 

1904.     England  and  Russia  in  our  civil  war,  and  the  war  between  Russia  and 
Japan.     Henry  Clews. 
North  American  revieiv,  vol.  178  (.Tune,  1904):  S12-S19. 


FAR  EAvST:  EUROPEAN  RELATIONS 

Boulger,  Demetrius  C.     Central  Asian  questions.     Essays  on  Afghanistan,  China, 
and  Central  Asia. 
London:  T.  Fisher  Unwin,  1885.     jcvi,  467  pp.     Portrait.     Majis.     8°. 

Brandt,  Max  August  Scipio  von.     Dreiunddreissig  Jahre  inOst-Asieu.     Erinneruii- 
g«n  eines  deutechen  Diplouiaten. 
Leipzig:  G.  Wigand,  1901.    .3  vols.     Portraits.    8°. 

Contents:  Bd.  1.  Die  preussische  Expedition  nach  Ost-Asien.  Japan,  Chiim,  jJinm. 
1860-1862.  Zuriiclc  nach  Japan.  1862.— Bd.  2.  Japan.  1863-1875.  1866.  In  unci 
durch  Amerilsa.    1871.    1872.— Bd.  3.  China.    1875  bis  1893. 

Die  Zuknnft  Ostasiens;  ein  Beitrag  zur  Geschichte  und  zuni  Verstandnis  der 

ostasiatischen  Frage.     .3.,  unigearb.  und  verm.  Aufiage. 
Stuttgart:  Streckerik  Schroder,  1903.     ii;  118  pp.     8°. 

Busley,  C.    Der  Kampf  um  den  ostasiatischen  Handel. 

Berlin:  Verlag  von  Dietrich  Reimer,  1897.     19.'>-U4  pp.     Folded  map.     Tables. 

8°.     (Deutsche  Kolonial-Gesellschaft.     Verhandlungen,  1896-97.     Heft  6.) 

\ 
Chirol,  Valentine.     The  Far  Eastern  question. 

London:  MacmUlan  and  co.,  1896.     viii,  (4),  196  pp.     Plates.     Folded  maps. 


Curzon,  George  Nathaniel,  1st  baron.     Problems  of  the  Far  East;   Japan-Knrea- 
China.     New  and  revised  edition.     [4th  ed.] 
Westminster:  A.  Constable  &  co.,  1896.    x.viv,  444  pp.     Tlluslrations.     Plates. 
Portraits.     Maps.     8°. 

Contents:  The  Far  East:  Japan ;  The  evoUition  of  modern  Japan ;  Japan  and  the  powers; 
1.  Treaty  between  Great  Britain  and  Japan  (July.  1,h'J4);  2.  Protocol.  Korea:  Life 
and  travel  in  Korea;  The  capital  and  court  of  Korea;  Political  and  commercial 
symptoms  in  Korea;  The  political  future  of  Korea.  China:  The  country  and  capi- 
tal of  China;  China  and  the  powers;  The  so-called  awakening  of  China:  Monasti- 
cism  in  Cliina,  The  prospect:  After  the  war:  The  destinies  of  the  Far  Ea.«t;  Great 
Britain  in  the  Far  East.  Appendix:  1.  Treaty  .  .  .  between  Japan  and  China.  2. 
Imperial  rescript  (May,  1895). 

Dennys,  Nicholas  B.,  ed.     The  treaty  ports  of  Cliina  ;inil  .laiian.     A  complete  guide 
to  the  open  ports  of  those  countries. 
London:  JVubner,  1867.    viii,  (S),  668,  (S),  .rxvi pp.     Maps.     Plans.    8". 

Krausse,  Alexis.     The  Far  East:  its  history  and  its  question. 

London:  Richards,  1900.     .riv,  (e),  .372  pp.     Maps.     Plans.     8°. 

"  The  Far  East"  is,  as  far  as  some  three  or  four  hundred  pages  permit,  a  complete 
account  of  the  history  of  the  Oriental  Asiatic  world  in  its  relations  with  Western 
civilization,  with  an  examination  of  the  existing  factors  in  the  Far  Eastern  ques- 
tion, and  a  statement  of  the  evidence  bearing  upon  the  subject. 

The  ap])eudices  to  tlie  bonk  are  particuhirly  useful  for  reference,  as  they  inchide  a 
chronology  of  the  history  of  the  Far  East,  the  text  of  the  more  important  treaties. 
and  conventions,  and  furnish  a  bibliography  of  authorities  on  the  Far  East. 

53 


54  LIBKARY    OF    CONGRESS 

La  Barre  de  Nanteuil,  Amanry  de,  Imron.     L'Orient  et  rEuio]>f  ilepuis  le  xvii" 
sici'lc  jiisiiu'imjinii'iriiui.     Ouvrage  contenant  des  cartes  ilo  I'Orient  aus 
I>rinfi]jale.s  t'poques  ile  son  histoire. 
Firmin-Didot  et  cie,  I'nrii,  [iSOS].     rx,  :i,51  pp.     Folded  maps.     S°. 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Pierre.     La  renovation  de  I'Asie  (SiWrie,  Chine,  Japon). 
Paris:  Armand  Colin  el  c''',  1900.     .rxi-ii,  {1),  4SJ pp.     J2°. 

"  L'ouvrage  de  M.  Kerre  Leroy-Beaulieu. '  La  rfnovation  de  I'Asle  (SiWrie,  Chine, 
Japon),'  a  eu  un  prand  succ6.i.  Les  pages  oCl  le  jeune  voyageur  a  jng<^  avec  tant  de 
clairvoyance  Ics  pays  d' Extreme-Orient,  qu'il  a  ctudi^.s  sur  place,  out  fail,  iion 
seulement  en  France,  mais  4  lY'tranger,  la  plus  vivc  impres-sion.  En  trois  niois  la 
premiere  edition  du  cet  onvrage  a  ctt5  t5pui.s(}c;  la  deuxi^me  vient  de  paraitre.  avec 
une  nouvcUe  preface,  Chez  IV'ditcur  Colin  .  .  .  En  mOmc  temps.  Ton  en  prt^pare  une 
traduction  anglaisc  et  une  traduction  allemKuclc." — V KcmmmistejTanrais. 

"  M.  Leroy-Beaulieu,  in  his  interesting  work.  '  I,,a  rt'-novation  de  I'A^ie,'  deals  with  the 
Japanese  question  at  some  length.  His  book  is  doubly  interesting  because  it  is  the 
first  serious  contribution  to  the  discussion  of  the  Far  Eastern  question  by  a  French 
^vriter,  and  because,  like  Mr,  Colquhoun's  book,  it  regards  the  Chinese  problem  not 
as  an  isolated  fact,  but  as  part  of  a  vast  evolution." 

Same. 

Paris:  A.  Colin,  1901.     .vxu;  4S2  pp.     12°. 

"La plus grande  partie  du  pr&sent  ouvrage a  paru  durant  les  deux  demidres  ann^es 
sous  forme  d'artieles  publics  dans  la  Revue  des  deux  mondes.  et  de  correspondatices 
adress6es  A  rEconomiste  fran^ais." 

The  awakening  of  the  East:  Siberia,  .Japan,  China.     [Tran-slated  l>y  Richaid 

Davey.]     With  a  jireface  by  Henry  Norman. 
New  York:    'SkClurv,  1900.     xxvii,  {1),  29S,  (1)  pp.     12°. 

.Same. 

London:   W.  Heinemann,  1900.     xxrii,  (1) ,  S99  pp.     13°. 

Mahan,  Alfred  T.     The  jiroblem  of  Asia  and  its  effect  upon  international  policies. 
BoMon:  Little,  Bromi  and  companji,  1900.     xxvi,  2S3  pp.     Foldtd  map.     12°. 

Norman,  Henry.     Asia.     The  peoples  and  politics  of  the  Far  East.     Travels  and 
studies  in  the  British,  French,  Spanish  and  Portuguese  colonies,  Siberia, 
China,  .Japan,  Korea,  Siam  and  Malaya.     [Fifth  impression.] 
London:  T.  F.  Vnu-in,  1900.    xvi,(UW I'p.    Frontispiece  {colored).    Plates.    Por- 
traits.    Folded  maps.    8°. 

China,  pp.  195-322:  Korea,  pp  323-374:  Japan,  pp.  375-406;  Siam,  pp.  407-522:  Malaya, 
pp.  .523-588. 

Pouvourville,   Albert  de.     L,a  question  d'extr§me-orient.     Avec  une  preface  par 
Gabriel  Hanotaux. 
Paris:  .i.  Pedove,  1900.    m,274pji.    S°.    {Etudes  coloniales,  rol.  5.) 

Reclus,  Elisee.     La  Chine  et  la  diplomatie  europeenne. 

Paris:  Editeurs  de  V Humanite  nouvelle,  1900.     16  pp.     8°. 

"Thinks  that  the  alliance  against  China,  beyond  captiu-ing  Pekin,  will  accomplish 
no  good:  is  inimical  to  Russia.  Thinks  Russian  advance  has  been  checked  to  the 
advantage  of  the  world." 

Reid,  Gilbert.     The  powers  and  the  partition  of  China. 

( Jn  The  Crisis  in  China,  pp,  3.5-.tO.    New  York,  1900.    12°.) 

Siebold,  Alexander,  Freiherr  von.     Japan's  accession  to  the  comity  of    nations. 
Translated  from  the  German  with  an  introduction  by  Charles  Lowe. 
London:  K.  Paul,  Trench,  Triihner  d- Co.,  1901.     xiii,  119,  (1)  pp.     12°. 

Appendix:  Treaty  of  commerce  and  navigation  between  Great  Britain  and  Japan. 
1894. 
•    "The  substance  of  this  little  work  .  .  ,  has  already  appeared  in  the  form  of  a  series 
of  articles  in  the  magazine  Ost-.\sien"  (Berlin,  1S99). — Pr^ace. 


LIST    OF   BOOKS    ON    THE    FAR    EAST:    ErROPEAN    RELATIONS      55 

Smith,  D.  Warres.     European  settlements  in  the  Far  East;  China,  Japan,  Corea, 
Indo-Cluna,  Straits  Settlements,  Malay  states,  Siam,  Netherlands,  India, 
Borneo,  the  Philippines,  etc. 
London:  S.  Low,   Marston  &  co.,  1900.     xiii,  SSI  pp.     IHugtrations.     Plates. 
Map.     S°. 

Speer,  Robert  E.     Missions  and  politics  in  Asia.     Studies  of  the  spirit  of  the  Eastern 
peoples,  the  present  making  of  history  in  Asia,  and  the  part  therein  of 
Christian  missions. 
Xew  York:  Fleming  H.  Revell  company,  1898.     271  pp.     12°.     (StudenW  lec- 
tures on  missions,  Princeton  theological  seminary,  1898. ) 

Townsend,  Meredith.     .\sia  and  Europe;  studies  presenting  the  conclusions  formed 
by  the  author  in  a  long  life  devoted  to  the  subject  of  the  relations  between 
Asia  and  Europe. 
New  York:  G.  P.  Putnam's  sons;    London:   A.    Constable  it  CO.,   1901.     xii, 
S88pp.     8°. 

Papers  originally  published  in  the  Contemporary  review,  the  National  review,  and 

the  Spectator. 
"The  conclusions  of  the  author  concerning  the  possible  influence  of  the  West  Euro- 
peans upon  Asia  are  absolutely  pessimistic  and — quite  correct  .  .  .  WTiere  our 
author  is  entirely  right  is  when  he  proves  by  so  many  illustration!!  that  up  to  the 
present  time  the  Europeans  have  had  no  influence  upon  the  mind  of  the  populations 
of  Asia."— Kropotkiti  in  The  Speaker,  ilan-h  19.  190i,  page  eoo. 

Walton,  Joseph.     China  and  the  present  crisLs.     With  notes  on  a  visit  to  Japan  and 
Korea. 
London:  Sampson   Low,   Marston  d  company,  1900.     viii,    S19  pp.     Folded 
map.     12°. 

"Mr.  Walton  has  only  recently  returned  from  an  eight  months'  journey  in  the  Far 
East:  he  had  interviews  with  many  of  those  who  figure  so  prominently  in  the 
present  crisis,  and  his  work  will  be  found  as  interesting  as  it  is  opportune." 


Try  fi'^ 

i.NGLO-RUSSIAN  RELATIONS 

B^rard,  Victor,  i.  c.,Eug6neV'ictor.    Questions exWrieurea  (1901-1902).    Cruanceset 
routes  tnrques.     Panama.     La  Triiiolitaine.     L'alliance  anglo-japonaise. 
La  guerre  sud-afrieuine.     La  royaute  o.^iiagnole.     L'Angleterre  et  la  paix. 
Paris.-  A.  Colin,  1902.     tii,  321,  [1)  pp.     12°. 
Reprinted  from  the  Revue  de  Paris. 

Boulger,  Demetrius  C.     England  and  Russia  in  Central  Asia.     With  two  maps  and 
appendices  (one  map  being  the  latest  Russian  official  map  of  Central  Asia). 
London:   }y.  H.  AUni  &  CO.,  1S79.     2  vols.     Map".     <V°. 

Chirol,  Valentine.     The  middle  eastern  question;  or,  Some  political   i)r(il)lem8  of 
Indian  defence.     With  maps,  illustrations,  and  appendices. 
London:  J.  Mtirray,  1903.    .mv,ol2pp.    Plates.    Maps.    Genealogical  table.    8°. 

"Bibliography":  pp.  499-600. 

Based  on  a  series  of  letters  written  for  the  TIme.s.    Preface . 

Cobbold,  Ralph  I'.     Innermost  Asia;  travel  and  sport  in  the  Pamirs. 

London:  Heiminann,  1900.    xviii,  334  pp.    IllMstrations.    Portrait.    Maps.   8°. 

Contains  a  bibliopraphy  of  innermost  Asia.    p.  346. 

"In  Mr.  Cobbold's  opinion,  the  destiny  of  Afghanistan  is  to  be  absorbed  and  to  be 
divided  between  the  rival  empires,  though,  if  the  reigning  .\meer  is  sueceeded  by 
a  son  of  his  own  mold,  the  inevitable  crisis  will  be  deferred.  To  sum  \ip  his  politi- 
cal survey,  what  chiefly  struck  him  in  his  travels  in  innermost  Asia  was  '  the  bar- 
barous insistence  of  the  Russian  Government  system,  the  brilliant  success  which 
invariably  attends  Russian  aims,  ami  tl\c  puerile  weakness  of  the  British  Govern- 
ment in  the  protecting  of  the  country's  interests.' "  ^ 

Colqulioun,  Archibald  Ross.     English  policy  in  the  Far  P^ast.     Being  the  Times 
special  correspondence. 
London:  FIdd  A  Tner,  The  Leadtnhall  press,  1SS5.     32pp.     S°. 

Russia  against  India,  the  struggle  for  Asia. 

London  and  New  York:  Harper  &  bros.,  1900.     vii,  (2),  246  pp.     Majis.     12°. 

Curzon,  George  Nathaniel  Curzon,  1st  baron.     Persia  and  the  Persian  question. 

London  and  Xeii'  Yorl::  Longmans,  Green  &  co.,  1892.     2  vols.     Ulustratiom. 
Plates.     Maps.     8°. 

Russia  in  Central  Asia  in  1SS9,  and  tlie  Anglo-Russian  question.     With 

appendices,  maps,  illustrations,  and  an  index. 
London  and  New  York:  Longmans,  Green,  and  co.,  1889.    xxiii,  [1),  477  pp. 
Illustrations.     Plates.     Folded  maps.    8°. 

"  Bibliography  of  Central  Asia":  pp.  440-46S. 

"The  nucleus  of  this  book— less  than  one-third  of  its  present  dimensions— appeared  in 
the  shape  of  a  series  of  articles,  entitled  'Russia  in  Central  Asia,'  which  [were] 
contributed  to  the  (Manchester  Courier)  and  other  .  .  .  newspapers,  in  .  .  . 
November  and  December,  1888,  and  January,  Ifm."— Preface. 

Lebedev,  V.  T.     Russes  et  Anglais  en  Asie  centrale.     Vers  I'Inde.     Esquisse  mili- 
taire  statistique  et  strategique.     Projct  de  carapagne  russe.     Traduit  du 
russe  par  le  capitaine  du  genie  brevet^  Cazalas. 
Paris:  Chapelot,  1900.    251  pp.     Map.     12°. 
56 


ANGLO-RUSSIAN    RKLATIONS:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS        57 

Popowski,  Jozef.     The  rival  powers  in  Central  Asia;  or,  The  struggle  between  Eng- 
lanil  and  Russia  in  the  East.     Tr.  from  the  Uenuan  of  Josef  Popowski  by 
Arthur  Baring  Brabrant,  and  ed.  by  Cliarles  E.  D.  Black.     With  a  map 
of  the  north-western  frontier  of  India,  showing  the  Pamir  region  and  part 
of  Afghanistan. 
WestminMer:  A.  Constable  and  company,  1893.     xxii,  2S5  pp.     8°. 
The  map  mentioned  in  tlio  title  is  lacking  in  this  copy. 
German  original  published  anonymously. 

Rees,  J.  D.     Russia,  India  and  the  Persian  gulf;  with  speeches  by  Sir  Charles  W. 
Dilke,  Sir  George  Birdwood,  and  H.  F.  B.  Lynch. 

London:  Harrison  &  sOMt,  1903.     .39  pp.     8°. 

Cover-title. 

Reprinted  from  the  Asiatic  quarterly  review  for  April,  1903. 

KuBsia's  marcli  towards  India  by  'an  Indian  officer.' 

London:  <S'.  Low,  Marston  &  co. ,  1894-     2  vols.     Folded  map.     8°. 

Stuart,  Donald.     The  struggle  for  Persia. 

Methum  &  CO.,  London,  190:1.     .v,  M8 pp.     Portrait.     Folded  map.     12°. 

Vfimb^ry,  Armin.     Central  Asia  and  the  Anglo-Russian  frontier  question:  a  series 
of  political  papers  by  Arminius  Vambery.     Tr.  by  F.  E.  Bunnett. 
London:  Smith,  Elder,  A  co.,  187 4.'    fiH,  S85  pp.     12°. 
First  published  in  "Unsere  Zeit,"  1867-1873. 

Whigliani,  H.  J.     The  Persian  problem;  an  examination  of  the  rival  positions  of 
Russia  and  Great  Britain  in  Persia,  with  some  account  of  the  Persian 
Gulf  and  the  Bagdad  railway. 
London:  Ishister  and  compamj,  1903.    xvi,  424  PP-    Plates.    Maps.    8°. 

'*  The  substance  of  a  series  of  articles  written  for  the  Morning  post." — littrod. 

Contents:  Introduction.— French  intrigues  at  MaskiU.— The  pearl  islands  of  the 
Gulf.— Cruising  on  the  Persian  coast.— Shall  we  give  Rassia  Bunder  Abbsis? — Visit  to 
the  pirate  coast. — The  importance  of  Koweit. — Persian  rule  in  the  delta  of  the  Shat- 
al-Arab.— The  position  of  Turkey  in  the  Gulf.— The  eouimerce  of  the  Gulf.— The 
politics  of  the  Gulf.— By  the  waters  of  Babylon.— On  the  Euphrates.— The  sacred 
cities  of  the  Shiahs. — Bagdad.— The  passage  of  the  Taurus. — The  Bagdad  railway. — 
The  oilfields  of  Persia.  —  Keriuanshah. — Persian  carpets.  —  Routes  in  Western 
Persia.- Teheran.— Great  Britain  versus  Russia.- Ru.ssia's  policy.— Wanted— a  Brit- 
ish policy  in  Per.sia.— On  the  Russian  road.— Russia's  advance  on  Persia  via  the 
Caucausus. 


ANGLO-RUSSIAN  RF;lATIONS:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS. 

1898.     Anglo-Russian  duel  in  the  Far  East. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  24  (March  17,  1898):  332. 

1898.     Tile  policy  of  playing  <log  in  the  manger.    (Russia  and  England  in  China.) 

SpiTlator,  rol.  80  (March  12,  1898):  364- 

1898.     England  and  Russia  in  China. 

Spectator,  vol.  SO  (Apr.  SO,  1898):  612. 

1898.     Russia  and  England  in  China. 

Saliirdai/  rcrleir,  vol.  S3  (May  7,  1898):  610-611. 

1898.     Russia  and  Mr.  Chamberlain's  long  spoon.     (China.)     W.  T.  Stead. 
Contemporary  review,  vol.  73  (June,  1898):  761-777. 

1898.     Our  policy  in  the  Far  East.     William  Dea  Vceux. 
Contemporary  review,  vol.  73  (./une,  1898):  795-803. 


58  LIBRARY    OF    CONORESS 

1898.     Splendid  isolation  or  what?    Henry  ^I.  Stanley. 

Xiiiilcenlh  rcnturn,  vol.  4,1  {June,  JS9S):  M0-S7S. 
Living  (lye,  rot.  21S  (.July  9,  1S98):  67-7S. 
Ech'ctir  mnyazini;  rol.  l.il  (Aug.,  1898):  2.S4-240. 

1898.     Kiif.'l:ui(l  and  Rii.-»ia.     (China.) 

Indepemlait,  ml.  .-TO  (Amj.  11,  1898):  437-4S8. 

1898.     Kntilaiid  and  Russia. 

Ontludk,  rul.  59  (Anij.  l.S,  1898):  901-903. 

1898.     England  and  Russia.     Charles  Frederick  Hamilton. 

OuKidian  imtyazine,  vol.  11  {Sept.,  1898):  444-447. 

1898.     England  and  Russia  in  the  Far  East.     Geoffrey  Drage. 
Forwn,  vol.  26  {Oct.,  1898):  1S9-1S5. 

1898.  China,  England,  and  Russia. 

Imperial  und  Asiatic  quarterly  review,  3d  series,  rol.  S  {Oct.,  1898):  .300-317. 

1899.  Russia  and  England  in  China.     Paul  S.  Reinsch 
Arena,  vol.  31  (Jan.,  1899):  75-84- 

1899.     Is  it  Russia  versus  England? 

American  monthly  reriev  of  revien'S,  rol.  19  (Ajir.,  1899):  401-403 

1899.     Enjjland  and  Russia. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (May  11,  1899):  LiU-lSlB. 

1899.     Russia  and  England  in  China. 

Onilook,  rol.  63  (May  13,  1899):  100-101. 

1899.     The  Anglo-Russian  agreement. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  30  (May  35,  1899):  650. 

1899.  The  coming  struggle  for  Persia.     R.  Popham  Lobh. 

Imperial  and  Asiatic  quarterly  review,  Sd  series,  vol.  8  { Oct.,  1899):  384-313. 

1900.  Ijettre  d'extreme-orient:  Le  .Tapon,   I'Angleterre  et  la  Russie.     .lean   de 

Cuers  de  Cogolin. 
Questions  diplomatiques  et  colonialea,  4.  annie  (Feh.  1,  1900):  139-143. 

1900.      British  and  Russian  diplomacy.     By  a  diplomat. 

Xortli  American  review,  vol.  170  (June,  1900):  871-883. 

1900.     Antagonism  of  England  and  Russia.     Demetrius  C.  Boulger. 

North  American  renew,  vol.  170  {June,  1900):  884-896. 

1900.     Afghanistan:  the  key  to  India.     Archibald  R.  Colquhoun. 

Imperial  and  Asiatic  q^carterly  review,  Sd  series,  vol.  10  (July,  1900):  35-36. 

1900.  .\  plea  for  peace — An  Anglo-Russian  alliance.     J.  W.  Gambier. 
Fortniyhtly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  68  (Dec,  1900):  998-1008. 

1901.  L'6tat  actuel  des  rapports  anglo-russes  dans  I'Asie  centrale.     G.  Saint- Yves. 

With  maps. 
Vomit,' de  V Asie  franqaise.     Bidletin,  vol.  1  (1901):  99-106. 

1901.     England  and  Russia.     J.  Novicow. 

Contemporary  reviev,  vol.  79  (Jan.,  1901):  49-56. 


ANGLO-RU8SIAN    RKLATIONS:    ARTICLKS    IN    PEKIODICALS       59 

1901.  Great  Britain  and  Russia.     .\.  Rustem  Bey  de  Bilinski. 

Xiiult'i'xlh  cnliirij  and  (iftir,  ml.  r,0  {Xov.,  1901):  72S-7S6. 

1902.  Les  rivaliti'.x  Internationales  en  Perse  et  dans  le  golfe  Persique.    Jean  Imbart 

de  la  Tour. 
Reime  de  geographie,  36.  annie  {Dec,  1902):  491-501. 

1903.  English  and  Russian  politics  in  the  East.     All  Haydar  Midhat. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  5S  (Jan.,  1903):  67-78. 

1903.     England,  Russia,  and  Germany. 

Saturday  remew,  vol.  95  {Jan.  10,  IMS):  S7-S8. 

1903.     England  and  Russia  in  the  politics  of  Europe:  the  eastern  question.     Fred- 
eric Austin  Ogg. 
Chautauqiian,  vol.  36  {Feb.,  1903):  463-474- 
Bibliography,  p.  474. 

1903.     The  lion  and  the  bear  in  the  Far  East.     Frederic  Austin  Ogg. 
Chautauquan,  vol.  37  {Apr.,  1903):  14-25. 

1903.     The  relations  of  Great  Britain  with  Russia.     Scrutator. 

Spectator,  vol.  90  {May  16,  1903):  776-777. 

1903.     The  Latin  rapprochement  and  Anglo-Russian  relaJons.     "Calchas." 
Fortnigldbj  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  73  {June,  1W3):  953-970. 

1903.  Tlie  government  of  Asiatics  by  England  and  Russia.     F.  H.  8krine. 

East  and  west,  vol.  2  {Oct.,  190:S):  1145-1155. 

1904.  British  sympathies  in  the  Var  Fast. 
Spectator,  vol.  92  {Jan.  2,  1904):  5. 

1904.     England,  Russia,  and  Manchuria. 

Public  opinion  {Ijmdon),  vol.  85  {Feb.  19,  1904):  3S4. 

1904.     Russia,  Japan,  and  ourselves.     C".  A.  W.  Pownall. 

Xineteenlh  rentm-ij  and  after,  vol.  55  {Mar.,  1904):  368-374- 

1904.     India's  dual  problem.     Sir  Walter  Lawrence. 
Natitmal  revieic,  vol.  4-3  {April,  1904):  245-262. 

1904.     Can  we  trust  Russia?    Coloniensis. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  {May,  1904):  754-764- 

1904.     The  obstacles  to  an  Anglo- Russian  convention.     An  impublished  chapter  of 
diplomatic  history.     E.  J.  Dillon. 

Contemporary  revieu;  vol.  85  {June,  1904):  800-828. 

1904.     The  crisis  in  Thibet.     E.  John  Solano. 

National  review,  vol.  43  {July,  1904):  823-846. 

1904.     The  Fnglisli  in  Tibet:  a  Russian  view.     Prince  Esper  Oukhtomsky. 

Xorth  American  review,  vol.  179  {July,  1904):  24-29. 


,      CHINA 

Ball    James  Dyer.     Things  Chinese;  being  notes  on  various  subjeets  connected  with 
China    3d  ed.  revised  and  enlarged. 
London:  S  Low,  Marslon,  and  co.,  1900.     (6),  666,  xxv,  pp.  8°. 

Bard,  E.     Les  Chinois  chez  eux.     2.  (5d. 

Paris:  A.  Colin,  1900.     {4),  S60  pp.     Plates.     IS". 

"The  author,  a  merchant  in  China,  describes  more  e.speeially  agrlculf.ire,  finances, 
money,  and  other  economic  aspects." 

Barrows,  .Tohn  Henry.     The  Oliristian  conquest  of  Asia.     Studies  and   personal 
observations  of  Oriental  religions. 
New  York:  t'liarlea  Scribner's  sons,   1S99.     .rvii,   [1),  258  pp.     12°.     {Morse 
lectures  of  1S9S. ) 

Chapter  VII:  Confucianism  and  tlie  awalcening  of  China. 

Chapter  VIII:  Success  of  .\siatic  missions;  America's  responsibility  to  the  Orient. 

Beals,  Zephaniah  Charles.     China  and  the  Boxers.     A  short  history  on  the  Boxer 
outbreak,  with  two  chapters  on  the  sufferings  of  the  missionaries  and  a 
closing  one  on  the  outlook. 
New  York:  M.  E.  Mumon,  11901].     1.'>S pp.     Illustrations.     Portrait.     12°. 

Beresford,  T^rd  Charles.     The  break-up  of  China.     With  an  account  of  its  present 
commerce,  currency,   waterways,  armies,  railways,  politics,  and  future 
prospects. 
New   York  and  London:  Harper  &  brothers,  1899.     x.rii,  491  pp.     Portraits. 
Folded  maps.    S°. 

Bishop,  Isabella  L.  Bird.     The  Yangtze  Valley  and  beyond.     An  account  of  jour- 
neys in   China,  chiefly  in  the  province  of  Sze  Chuan  and   among   the 
Man-tze  of  the  Soms  territory. 
New  York:  G.  P.  Putnam's. tons,  1900.     2  vols.     Portrait.     Plates.     Map.     8°. 
Reviewed  in  "  Spectjitor,"  January,  1900,  under  title  "  Spheres  of  influence  in  China." 

Boulger,  Demetrius  C     Tlie  history  of  China.     New  and  revised  edition. 
London:   W.  Thacker  A:  co.,  1S9S.     2  vols.     Portraits.     Maps.     8°. 

Sayne.     A  new  edition,  revised  and  brought  up  to  date.     Containing  chap- 

ters on  the  recent  concessions  to  the  European  powers. 
London:   IC.  Thacker  tt  co.,  1900.     2  vols.     Portraits.     Maps.     8°. 

A  short  history  of  China.     An  account  for  the  general  reader  of  an  ancient 

empire  and  people.     A  new  edition,  with  an  additional  chapter  continu- 
ing the  history  from  1890  to  date. 
London:  Gibbings  &  company,  1900.     {6),  436 pp.     8°. 
Pp.  iK-Xn  contain  "  How  China  is  governed." 

The  "Reign  of  Kwangsu,  1890-1900,"  (pp.  374a-3"41)  said  to  be  written  "by  a  com- 
petent authority." 
60 


SELECT   LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    CHINA  61 

Brandt,  M.  von.     Industrielle  und  Eisenbahn-Unternehmungen  in  China.     Mit 
einer  Kartenskizze. 
Berlin:    Reimer,    1S99.     121-140  pp.      8°.      (Deutsche  Kolonial-Gesellncha/l. 
Verhandlungen,  1898-99.     Heft  4.) 

Brenier,    Henri.     La    mi.'ision    lyonnaise   d' exploration   cominerciale   en   Chine, 
1895-97.     Avec  cartes,  plans,  et  gravures  d'apros  les  documents  rapport^s 
par  la  mission. 
Lyons:  A.  Rey  et  cie,  1898.     [6),  xxxn,  386,  4~-i  pp.     Illnstralions.     Folded 
map.i.     F°. 

Contents:  1"  partie.  R<5oits  fie  voyages,  'imo  partie.  Rapports  commeroiaux  et 
notes  diverses. 

"Of  all  the  eommercial  missions  to  which  the  immediate  prospect  of  the <levek)pment 
of  the  resources  of  China  hy  modem  methods  has  recently  given  rise,  the  most  fully 
equipped  and  that  with  the  most  extensive  and  elaborate  programme  is  that  organ- 
ized by  the  Chamber  of  Commerce  of  Lyons,  and  the  report  published  by  the  di- 
rector of  this  mission,  Mr.  Henri  Brenier,  is  of  corresponding  interest  and  value." 

Bretschneider,  E.     History  of  European  botanical  discoveries  in  China. 

London:  S.  Lmo,  Manton  &  Co.,  1S9S.     -2  vols.     4''. 

"Dr.  Bretschneider's  present  viarjuum  ojms  is  by  no  means  a  mere  botanical  work,  as 
its  name  would  seem  to  imply,  but  also  a  magnificent  political  and  geographical 
record  of  all  that  Europeans  have  ever  done  in  China  from  Marco  Polo  down  to  Mr. 
G.  M.  H.  Playfair,  and  there  is  hardly  any  subject  connected  with  the  Far  East  but 
what  accurate  light  is  shed  upon  it  by  the  dates,  data,  itineraries,  geographical  and 
biographical  details,  commercial  notes,  and  other  information  furnished  by  the  in- 
dustrious and  scrupulously  painstaking  author,  than  whom  there  is  no  one  in  the 
sinological  field  more  worthy  of  absolute  confidence." 

Brinkley,  Frank.     China;  its  history,  arts,  ami  literature.     [Library  ed.] 

Boston  and  Tokyo:  J.  B.  Millet  company,  \_1902'] .     4  t'ols.     Plates  [partly  col- 
ored).    Folded  map.     8°.     {Oriental  series,  v.  9-12.) 

Chang'-Chih.-tung.     China's  only   Imiie.      An  appeal   by   her  greatest    viceroy. 
Translated  from  the  Chinese  edition  by  Samuel  I.  Woodbridge.     Intro- 
duction by  Griffith  John. 
New  York,  et.c.:  F.  JI.  Rerell  company,  1900.     (2),  151  pp.     Portrait     12°. 

La  Chine.     Expansion  des  grands  puissances  en  extrdme-orient  (1895-1898). 
Paris:  R.  Chapelot  <&  cie.,  1899.     viii,  223 pp.     Folded  map.    S°. 

Contents:  1.  G(5ographie  fconomique  de  la  Chine;  Description  cconomique  des  pro- 
vinces chinoises:  Statistique  <'COnomique  de  la  Chine. 

2.  Rapports  de  la  Chine  avec  les  grandes  puissances  de  1894  A  1898;  L'Europe  au  traits 
de  Simonosaki;  Les  premiers  progr^s  de  la  Russie  en  Chine  et  en  Cort^e;  L'interven- 
tion  de  I'AUemagne  k  Kiao-tehi5ou;  Les  consequences  de  roccupation  de  Kiao- 
tch<?ou;  Le  rdle  de  la  France. 

3.  L'exploitation  du  marche  chinois;  Les  conces.sions  obtenues  par  les  strangers  en 
Chine:  L'exploitation  cconomique  de  la  Chine;  La  penetration  des  provinces 
meridionales  par  I'lndo-Chine  franeaise;  Conclusion:  Le  partage  ^ventuel  de 
I'cmpire  chinois.    With  folded  map:  carte  i5eonomi(|Ue  de  la  Chine. 

Colquh.oun,  Archibald  Ross.     China  in  transformation. 

NeiB   York  and  London:  Harper  &  brothers,  1898.     ix,   (1),  382  pp.     Plate. 
Folded  maps.     Diagrams.    8°. 

Overland  to  China. 

New   York  anrf  London:  Harper  A  brothers,   1900.     ri,  {1),  464  PP-     Plates. 
Portrait.     Colored  maps.     8°. 

The  problem  in  China  and  British  policy. 

London:  P.  S.  King,  1900.     SO  pp.     Map.     12°. 


62  LIRRARY    OF    CONORKSfl 

Cordier,  Ileiiri.     llisti>irt'  iU'.«  relations  ile  la  Chiin'  avfc  Irs  imissaiifua  occidentalea 
1S60-1900. 
Paris:  F.  Akan,  1901-ni0:i.     3  roh.     8°. 

[Vol.  1.]  L'EmpereurT'OiingTehi;  (1861-1R76). 

[Vol.  2.]  L'Einpereiir  Kouiing-Siu,  Preinierp  purtle:  1875-1887. 

[Vol.  3.]  L'Empereur  Kouang-Siu,  Deuxi^me  partie:  (ISSS-lWi). 

The  Crisis  in  China.     Tvi'])iintP(l  by  i>erniission  from  the  North  .\nierican  review. 

Xnr  York  A-   I.onihin:  Ilarpfr  i(-  //n«.,    Umi).     r,  J7 1  pp.     Plutcs.      Porlrnitfi. 
Mapx.     U°. 

CoNTKNTs:  Smyili.  C.  H.  faiisos  of  l\w  luitifor^iKn  tfcliiiK  in  China.— Ufid,  C.  Tlie 
powers  and  the  partition  of  China.— Johnston,  C.  The  struggle  for  refnnn  in 
China.— Barrett,  J.  Political  posjiibillties  in  China.— Lewis,  R.  E.  The  gnthering 
of  the  storm. -Colnnhotin,  .\.  R.  The  Far  Ea.stern  crisis. —.MikhailotT.  M.  The  great 
Siberian  railway.— Beresford,  Lord  C.  China  and  the  powers.— \Vu  Ting-fang. 
Mutual  helpfulness  between  China  and  the  United  States.— Boulger,  1).  C.  Ameri- 
ca's share  in  a  partition  of  China.— Wilson.  J.  H.  America's  interests  in  China.— 
Dilke,  Sir  C.  W.    The  American  policy  in  China. 

Cumming,   Constance   F.    Gordon-.     Wanderings   in    (Uiina.     llln.utratiMl    by   the 
author. 
Willimn  Blackwuod  and  simit,  Edinhuryli  and  Londmi,  I'.iOO.     vi,  {i) ,  ,~)ii8  pp. 
Pinter  {photogravures) .     Folded  map.     S°. 

Douglas,  Robert  K.     China.     Revised  and  onlartreil.     With  many  illui^trations and 
an  index. 
Chicago,  New  York:   Tlie  Werner  company,  1805.     (104  pp.     Platen  (irijiidnifs). 
1S°. 

China. 

New  York:   G.   P.   Putnam's  som,    1901.      [2),  x-i>,   47i  pp.      Illustrations. 
Portraits.     Folded  map.     8°.     {The  Slory  of  the  nations.) 

Li  Hung  Chang. 

London:  Bliss,   Sands  and  Foster,   1895.     261  pp.      Portraits.     li°.      {Public 
men  of  to-dai/.) 

Society  in  C!hina. 

London:  A.  D.  Innen  A- n,.,  1894.     .rri,  415  pp.     Plates.     8°. 

Same.     Popular  ed. 

IjOndon:  A.  D.  Innes  <&  co.,  1895.     .rii,  434pp.     1S°. 

Edkins,  Joseph.     Religion  in  China;   containing  a  brief  account  of  the  three  reli- 
gions of  the  Chinese.     Revised  edition. 
Ltmdon:  K.Paul,  Trench,  Ti-iihner  &  co.,  1893.     .ex,  260  pp.     8°.     (Tri'ihner's 
oriental  series. ) 

Favier,  Alphonse.     P(jking.     Histoire  et  description.     Ouvrage  orn^  de  524  gravures 
anciennes  et  nouvelles,  reproduites  ou  execut<'!es  par  des  artistes  chinois 
d'ai)res  les  plus  pr<''cieux  documents. 
Brn.relles:  Desclee  de  Bronver  et  cie,  1900.     410  pp.     Sm.  4°. 

Giles,  Herbert  Allen.     A  Chinese  biographical  dictionary. 
Leyden:  E.  J.  Brice,  1897  {1898'].     xii,  1022 pp.     8°. 

Glass,  J.  G.  H.     Report  on  the  concessions  of  the  Pekiii  Syndicate,  limited,  in  the 
provinces  of  Shansi  and  Hoonan,  China,  with  estimates  of  cost  of  railways 
and  other  works  necessary  for  their  development. 
Pekin,  1899.     174  pp.     Map.    4°. 

"A  comprehensive  report  on  the  resources  of  the  territories  for  the  eoinniercial  exploi- 
tation of  which  the  Pekin  Syndicate  has  obtained  a  concession  from  the  Chinese 
government." 


SELECT    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    CHINA  ()3 

Gorst,  Harold  E.     China:   on  the  economic  resources  of  Cliina,  and  tlie  present 
political  and  commercial  conditions  of  the  country. 
London:   Sands  it  eo.,   1S99.     ex,  SOO  pp.     IllusirationK.     Map.     S°.     {TIte 
Imperial  interest  lihrarij,  edited  by  II.  Hendry.) 

"Mr.  Gorst  hiis  produced  a  very  readable  book,  and  has  certainly  succeeded  in  show- 
up  very  clearly  some  of  the  chief  points  in  the  political  problems  which  present 
themselves  to  us,  now  that  up-to-date  events  have  altered  the  bearings  of  the  gen«ral 
outlook  in  the  Far  East." 

Great  Britain.     Foreign  office.     China.     No.  3  (190.3).     Report  by  Acting  Consul 
Litton  on  a  journey  in  north-west  Yunnan.     Presented  to  both  Houses  of 
Parliament  by  command  of  His  Majesty.     November  190.3. 
London:   Printed  for   His   Majesti/s  Slationenj   office,    [790.')'].      (,*?),    .?.?  ]>]>. 
Maps.     F°.     \_(M.  1S36.'[ 

China.     No.  1   (1904).     Report  by  C.  W.  Campbell,  His  Majesty's 

consul  at  Wuchow,  on  a  journey  in  Mongolia.     Presented  to  both  Houses 
of  Parliament  by  command  of  His  Majesty.     Januarj*  1904. 
London:  Printed  for  His  Majestifs  stationery  office,  [1904^.    43  pp.     Folded  map. 
F°.     [CW.  1S74.'\ 

Gundry,  R.  S.     China  present  and  past.     Foreign  intercourse,  progress  ana  resources, 
the  missionary  question,  etc. 
London:  Chapman  &  Hall ,  1895 .     .c.r.ci,  (l),414pp-     Map.     S°. 

Hart,  <S'(r  Robert,  Islbart.     "These  from  the  land  of  Sinim."     Essays  on  the  Chi- 
nese question.     With  appendices. 
London:  Chapman  d- Hall,  1901.     {8),S54pp.     8°. 

Helmolt,  H.  F.     The  world's  history,  a  survey  of  man's  record.     Vol.  IL     Oceania, 
Eastern  Asia,  and  the  Indian  Ocean. 

London:   William  Heinemami,  1904.     x,  {2),  643  pp.     Plates  (partly  colored). 
Portraits.     Facsimile.     Maps.     4°-        * 
china,  pp.  56-114. 

Hertslet,  .Sic  Edward.     Treaties  an<l  tariffs    regulating   the  trade  between  Great 
B''itain   and   foreign  nations:   and    extracts  of   treaties  between  foreign 
powers,    containing   most    favoured-nation    clauses  applicable  to  Great 
Britain.     China.     In  force  on  the  1st  January,  1877. 
London:  Butteru<orths,  1S77.     ir,  351  pp.     8°. 

Treaties  between  Great  Britain  and  China,  and  between  China  and  foreign 

powers.     In  force  on  the  1st  .lanuary,  1896. 
London:  Harrison  li-  sons,  1896.     3  vols.     8°. 

Not  now  in  the  Library  of  Congress,  but  has  been  ordered. 

Hesse-Wartegg,  Ernst  von.     China  und  Japan.     Erlebnisse,  Studien,  Beobach- 
tungen  auf  einer  Reise  um  die  Welt. 
Leipzig:  J.  J.  Weber,  1897.     viii,  508  pp.     Illustrations.     Plat^i.     Map.     S°. 

Sam.e.    2te  vermehrte  Auflage. 

Lei}  ig:  J.  J.  Weber,  1900.     x,  658  pp.     lllu.'<tralio7is.     Plates.     Map.     8°. 

Schantungund  Deutsch-China.     Von  Kiautschou  ins  heilige  Land  von  China 

und  vom  Jangtsekiang  nach  Peking  ira  Jahre  1898.  « 

Leipzig:  J.  L  Weber,  1898.     rii,  394  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     Maps.     S°. 

Holcombe,  Chester.     The  real  Chinese  question. 

New  York:  Dodd,  Mead  A-  compani/,  1900.     xx,  ,386  pp.     8°. 
"An  endeavor  to  consider  the  subject  from  a  Chinese  standpoint." 


64  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Ho'worth,  Henry  H.     Histor>'  of  the  Mongols  from  the  9th  to  the  19th  century. 

London:  Ixmgmans,  Green  and  co.,  1876-1888.    S  parix  in  4  volumes.     Folded 
maps.    8°. 

Part  I.  The  Mongols  proper  and  the  Kalmuks.  Part  n.  The  so-fallol  Tartars  of  Riu- 
!da  and  Central  Asia.    Part  III.  The  Mongols  of  Persia. 

Ireland,  .Vlleyne.     China  ami  the  powers;  chapters  in  the  historj-  of  Chinese  inter- 
course with  western  nations. 
Boston:  Privately  printed  for  L.  Maynnrd  [by  (i.  H.  Ellis  co.],  1902.     x,  140 
pp.     Tables.     8°. 

Contests:  The  Chinese  problem.— Early  western  intercourse  with  China,  B.  c.  1000- 
A.  I>.  1600.— The  United  States  and  China.— England  and  China. — Ru.ssia  and  China.— 
Apfiendioes:  Comparative  tables,  showing  an  analysis  of  Chinese  trade  from  1880  to 
1899.  inclusive. 
"The  chapters  containe<l  in  this  volume  were  originally  written  to  form  part  of  a 
larger  work,  which  .  .  .  was  to  have  contained  chapters  on  China's  relations  \vith 
France,  Germany,  and  Japan  .  .  .  Owing  to  ill-health.  Mr.  Ireland  was  compelled 
to  abandon  this  work  .  .  .  One  hundred  and  fifty  copies  are  .  .  .  being  printed  for 
private  sale,  after  which  printing  the  plates  will  be  destroyed." 

Jack,  R.  rx>gan.     The  back  blocks  of  China;  a  narrative  of  experiences  among  the 
Chinese,  Sifans,  Lolos,  Tibetans,  Shans  and  Kachins,  between  Shanghai 
and  the  Irrawadi. 
London:  E.  Arnold,  1904.     xrii,  $69  pp.     Plates.     Folded  maps.     8°. 

Erausse,  Alexis.     China  in  decay.     A  handlxjok  to  the  Far  Eastern  question. 
London:  Chapman  ct  Hall,  1898.     ix,  400  pp.     IllustrationK.     Maps.     8°. 

China  in  decay.     The  story  of  a  disappearing  empire.     3d  ed. 

London:  Cliapman  &  Hall,  1900.  xiv,(S),418pp.   Plates.   Portraits.  Maps.  8°. 

"The  present  issue  of  'China  in  Decay'  has  been  thoroughly  overhauled  and  revLsed, 
and  contains  a  con.siderable  amount  of  added  matter.  It  includes  a  record  of  the 
recent  events  in  China  down  to  the  reported  fall  of  the  legation.*,  and  will  be  found 
to  contain  all  that  is  requisite  to  insure  a  complete  understanding  of  the  present 
crisis  in  China." 

The  story  of  the  Chinese  crisis.     Specially  prepared  map  and  a  plan  of 

Peking. 
London:  Cassell,  1900.     vi,  (2),  237,  (1)  pp.     Map.     Plan.     12°. 

"Summarizes  the  history  of  European  political  relations  with  China.  Closes  with  the 
capture  of  Peking  by  the  allies,  with  discussion  of  the  future  of  China." 

Lauder,  Arnold  Henrj'  Savage.     China  and  the  allies. 

Xew  York:  C.  Scribner's  sons,  1901.    2  vols.     Illustrations.    Plates  {partly  col- 
ored).    Maps.    8°. 

Lansdell,  Henry.     Chinese  Central  Asia;  a  ride  to  Little  Tibet. 

London:  S.  Low,  Marston,  it  company,  1893.     2  vols.     Illustrations  {including 
portraits).     Plates.     Folded  maps.    8°. 

"  This  book  is  intended  to  be  a  companion  and  a  complement  to  my  Russian  Central 
Asia." — Preface. 

Appendices:  a.  Some  of  the  specimens  of  fauna  collected  by  Dr.  Lansdell  in  Central 
Asia.    B.  Bibliography  of  Chinese  Central  Asia. 

"List  of  authors,  with  reference  niiml)ers  to  their  works  in  the  foregoing  bibli- 
ography": pp.  477-480. 


SELECT  LIST  OF  BOOKS  ON  CHINA 


65 


Lansdell,  Henry.     Russian  Central  Asia,   including  Kuldja,  Bokhara,  Kliiva  and 
Merv. 
London:   S.  Low,  Marston,  fiearle,  and  R'wintjlon,  188S.     2  vols.     Illunlrations 
(indudhui  portraiU,  plan) .     Plates.     Folded  maps.     8°. 

Appendices :  a.  The  fauna  of  Russian  Turkistan.  B.  Tlie  flora  of  Russian  Turkistan. 
V.  Bihlio^aphy  of  Russian  Central  Asia. 

"List  of  authors,  with  reference  numbers  to  their  works  in  the  foregoing  bibli- 
ography": pp.  (i81-6K4. 

"  The.se  vohimes  may  be  considered  as  a  record  of  the  completion  of  the  philan- 
thropic object  that  originally  prompted  my  first  visit  to  Asiatic  Russia  as  detailed  in 
the  work  entitled  'Through  Siberia.'" — Prejace. 

Iietters  frotu  a  Chinese  official;  being  an  eastern  view  of  western  civilization. 
Neil]  York:  McClure,  Phillips  &  co.,  1903.     xiv,  75  pp.     12°. 

*'  The  author,  who  holds  a  brief  for  the  Chinese,  states  his  case  with  ability  and  with 
an  appearance  of  justice.  But  by  ignoring  all  that  there  is  to  be  said  to  their  detri- 
ment, and  laying  emphasis  on  the  weak  side  of  the  Western  position,  he  has  drawn 
an  unreal  and  misleading  picture.  He  professes  to  be  a  Chinaman.  This  may  be 
set  a.side.  There  is  only  one  Chinaman  who  could  write  such  a  book,  the  present 
Chinese  Minister  at  the  Court  of  St.  James,  but  it  is  not  in  his  \em."—AthfTia:um, 
Nov.  SO,  1901,  p.  7Si. 

Little,  Archibald  Johfi.     Through  the  Yang-tse  gorges;  or,  Trade  and  travel  in 
Western  China.     3d  and  rev.  ed. 
London:  Sampson  Loxv,  Marstun,  &  CO.,  1898.    xm,  SIS  pp.    Plate.    Map.    8°. 

Little,  Alicia  H.  N.  B.     Intimate  China.    The  Chinese  a.s  I  have  seen  them.     By 
Mrs.  Archibald  Little. 
London:  Hutchhuon  &  CO.,  1899.     .rr,  (1),  Gl.'i  pp.     Illustralions.     L.  8°. 


h; 


"l^I" 


Li  Hung-chang,  his  life  and  times.     By  Mrs.  Archibald  Little. 
London  [c(c.].-  Cassell  <fc  company,  11904}.     viii,  356  pp.     Portraits.     Folded 
map.     8°. 


Lynch,  George.     The  war  of  the  civilizations,  being  the  record  of  a  "  foreign  devil's  " 
experiences  with  the  allies  in  China. 
Longmans,  Oreen,  and  CO.,  London,  1901.     xx,  319  pp.    Plates.    Portraits.    8°. 

Lyons,  F-ond.     f'liamhre  de  commerce. 
See  Brenier,  II. 

Macgowan,  J.     A  history  of  China  from  the  earliest  days  down  to  the  present. 

London:  K.  Paul,   Trench,   Triibner  and  CO.,  1897.     ix,  {i),  622  pp.     Folded 

map.     8°. 

Michie,  Alexander.     China  and  Christianity. 

Boston:  Knight  and  Millet,  1900.     .riv,  (2),  232  pp.     12°. 


The  Englishman  in  China  in  the  Victorian  era,  as  illustrated  in  the  life  of 
Sir  Rutherford  Alcock,  many  years  consul  and  minister  iti  China  and 
Japan. 

London:  Blackwood,  1900.     2  vols.     Plates.     Portraits.     Folded  map.     8°. 


Mitford,  Algernon  Bertram  Freeman.     The  attach^  at  Peking. 

London:  Macinillan&  CO.,  1900.     Uiii,  386 pp.     Plan.     8°. 
32784—04 5 


66  LIHKAUV    OK    CONORKSS 

Parker,  Kihvard  IlarpiT.     (Uiina,  her  hijitory,  liiplouiacy,  and  foinnierce,  from  the 
carlii-^'t  tiiiic.-i  to  the  pn-tient  day. 
iMndoit,  J.  Murrwi,  1901.     jx,  S32 pp.     Portrait.     Mapn.     S". 

China,  past  and  prt'sont. 

Lnndon:  Chapmini  k'c  JIiill,  190.1.     .rl,  (1),  4^4  pp.     Folded  map.     *°. 

•    John  Chinaman  and  a  few  others. 

Lmi'lrm:  .John  Murraij,  1901.     xx,  380  pp.     Plates.     Portrait.*.     8°. 

Parsons,  William  Barclay.     An  American  engineer  in  China. 

Sew  York:  McClure,  Phillips  &  CO.,  1900.     321pp.     lUusstrations.     Map.     IB". 

Pinon,  Rem',  and  Jean  dc  Marcillac.     La  Chine  qui  s'ouvre.     Ouvra^e  .  .  .  aug- 
ment6  d'appendicus  ct  de  docnnients. 
Paris:  Perrin  &  cif,  1900.     .ri,  {1),  306  pp.     Maps.     12°. 

Contests:  La  guerre  sino-japonaise et  la  pint'tration  fitrangfire  en  Chine  rte  1894  A 189": 
L'affaire  <le  Kiaotelieou  et  le  proteetorat  religieux  en  Chine:  La  France  et  la  ques- 
tion d*exlrOme-orient  en  1900. 

Appendices:  1.  Leschemin.s  de  fer  en  Chine.  2.  La  question  de  la  concession  fran- 
i.aise  ik  Clianghai.    ;^.  Le.xtension  de  Hong-Kong:  Documents:  Cartes  et  plans. 

Reprint  of  articles  from  the  "Revue  des  deux  mondes"  .  nd  the  "  Revue  desques- 
tiones  diplomatiqiies  et  coloniales."— Prf/acf. 

Poole,  Stanley  Lane-.     The  life  of  Sir  Harry  Parkes. 

London  and  New   Vorh:  Macinillan  d-  co.,   1S94.     3  vols.     Portrait.     Folded 
maps.     Plan.    S°. 

Beclus,  Elis^e  and  On^sime  Reclus.     L'empire  dn   milieu;  le  climat,  le  sol,  les 
■  rai-e.a,  la  richesse  de  la  chine. 
Pari.*:  Hachetts  et  c>',  1902.     (6),  667  pp.     Frontispiece.     Maps.     8°. 

Scidmore,  Eliza  Ruhamah.     China.     The  lonfi;-lived  empire. 

New  York:  The  Century  Co.,  1900.     .riii,  (3),  459 pp.     Plates  {photogravures). 

IS". 

Smith,  Arthur  H.     China  in  con\'ulsion. 

New  York,  Chicago,  {etc.'^:  F.  H.  Perell  CO.,  1901.     S  vols.     Plates.     Portraits. 
Maps.     8°. 

Paged  continuously. 

Chinese  characteristics.     2d  ed.,  rev. 

Nezv  York,  Chicago,  [etc.]:  F.  H.  Revell  CO.,  [1894].     342pp.     Plates.    8°. 

Same.    5th  ed.,  rev. 

Edinhiirgh  and  London:  Olipliant,  Anderson  and  Ferrier,  1900.    342  pp.     llltus- 
tratioiis.     8°. 

Village  life  in  China;  a  study  in  sociology. 

New  York,  Chicago,  [etc.]:  F.H.  Retell  company,  [1899].     360  pp.    Plates.    *". 

"  It  is  a  great  mistake  to  approach  the  Chinese  in  an  insular  and  contemptuous  frame 
of  mind,  and  it  is  a  relief  to  one  who  can  not  altogether  forego  iiis  belief  in  a  future 
for  China  to  take  up  such  a  txjok  a.s  that  by  Arthur  H.  Smith,  and  tu  trace  in  'Vil- 
lage Life  in  China '  the  s>Tnpathetic  touch  of  the  writer  of  '  Chinese  Characteristics.' 
the  most  brilliant  book  ever  written  on  that  subject." 

Thomson,  H.  C.     China  and  the  powers.     A  narrative  of  the  outbreak  of  1900. 

Longmans,   Green,  ami  CO.,  London,  Neiv   York,  1902.     xii,  S85  pp.     Plates. 
Maps.     8°. 


SELECT    LIST   OF    BOOKS    ON    CHINA  67 

Thomson,  John.     Through  China  with  a  eamera. 

Weslmhifter:  A.Comlable&co.,  189S.    xiv,  2S4  pp.    Plateg  (photogravure*) .    8°. 

United  States.     Bureau  of  statistics.     Commercial  China  in  1904.     Area,  popula- 
tion, production,  railways,  telegraphs,  and  transportation  routes,  and  for- 
eign commerce  and  commerce  of  United  States  with  China. 
Washington:  Govemme>d  printing  office,   1904.      '«',   33S6-2446  pp.     Folded 
map.    4°- 
Cover-title. 
Reprinted  from  the  Monthly  summar}'  of  commerce  and  finance  for  Jan.,  1904. 

Wen  Ching.     The  Chinese  crisis  from  within.     Edited  by  G.  M.  Reith. 
London:  Grant  Richards,  1901.     xvi,  354,  (1)  pp-     8°. 

Wildman,  Rounsevelle.     C'hina't<  open  door:  a  sketch  of  Chinese  life  and  history; 
with  an  introduction  by  C.  UenViy. 
Boston:  Lothrop  publishing  company,  [1900'].     xvi,  318 pp.     Portrait.     Plates. 
12°. 

"Writing  from  the  modem  American  point  of  view,  Mr.  Wildmaii  could  hardly  fail 
to  treat  quite  fully  of  the  commercial  and  economic  problems  of  the  Far  East.  HLs 
residence  at  Hongkong  as  the  official  representative  of  the  United  States  has  afforded 
him  many  opportunities  for  accurate  judgment  on  these  subjects." 

Williams,  Samuel  Wells.     A  history  of  China,  being  the  historical  chapters  from 
"The  Middle  Kingdom;"   with  a  concluding  chapter  narrating  recent 
events. 
New  York:  Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1897.     xiv,  474  PP-     Plan.     8°. 

The  mitldle  kingdom,  a  sur%-ey  of  the  geography,  government,  literature, 

.social  life,  arts  and  history  of  the  Chinese  empire  and  its  inhabitants. 
Revised  edition,  with  illustrations  and  a  new  map  of  the  empire. 
Xeic  York:  Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1883.     2  vols.     Plates.     Map.     8°. 

Wilson,  .Tames  Harrison.  China.  Travels  and  investigations  in  the  "Midille 
Kingdom" — a  study  of  its  civilization  and  possibilities.  Together  with 
an  account  of  the  .  .  .  Boxer  war,  the  relief  of  the  legations,  and  the 
re-establishment  of  the  peace.  3d  etlition,  revised  throughout,  enlarged, 
and  reset. 
.  New  York:  D.  Appleton  and  company,  1901.  xxxrii,  (1),  429  pp.  Folded 
maps.     Portrait.     12°. 


AUTHOR  IITDEX 


Adam,  G.  Mercer 9 

Adams,  Brooks 49, 51 

Adams,  Cyrus  C 42, 44 

Adams,  H.  E.  Goold- 35 

Ali  Haydar  Midhat.     See  Midhat, 
All  Haydar. . 

Allen,  H.  N 35 

American    academy    of    political 

and  social  science 49 

Anderson,  William 28 

Andre,  A 10 

Anspach,  Alfred 7 

Archibald,  James  F.  J 44 

Ardouin-Dumazet 44 

Argus,  pseud 43 

Asakawa,  K 48 

Aulagnon,  Claudius 12 

Austin,  O.  P 32,52 

Aveling,  Edward 11 

Babcock,  Mrs.  Winifred  (Eaton)  .        33 

Bacon,  Alice  Mabel 28 

Bacon,  N.  T 48 

Baker,  Colgate 42,48 

Ball,  James  Dyer 60 

Bancroft,  H  ubert  Howe 49 

BarakatuUah,  Muhammad 41 

Bard,  E 60 

Barnaby,  Charles  W 15 

Barre,  Paul 27 

Barrett,  John 51, 52, 62 

Barrows,  John  Henry 60 

Baty,  T 48 

Bealby,  J.  T 22 

Beals,  Zephaniah  Charles 60 

Beer,  M 41 

Beguin,  C 46 

Benjamin,  Park 42 

Berard,  Victor,  i.  e.,  EugSne  Vic- 
tor    22,  37,  47,  56 

Beresford,  Lord  Charles 49, 60, 62 

Beschinoff,  Ivan 16 

Beveridge,  Albert  Jeremiah 12, 49 


Page 

Bigelow,  Poultney 14 

Bilinski,  A.  Rustem  Bey  de 15, 59 

Birdwood,  Sir  George 14, 57 

Bishop,  Isabella  L.  Bird 28,  35, 60 

Black,  Charles  E.  D 57 

Blakeney,  William 35 

Bolce,  Harold 34,47,52 

Bonar,  H.  A 21 

Bookwalter,  John  Wesley 12 

Boulangier,  Edgar 17 

Boulger,  Demetrius  C 41, 

49, 53, 56, 58, 60, 62 

Bower,  Hamilton 22 

Brabrant,  Arthur  Baring 57 

Brandes,  Georg  Jlorris  Cohen 7 

Brandt,  Max  August  Scipio  von  ..  53,61 

Brenier,  Henri 61 

Brent,  Charles  H 33 

Bretschneider,  E 61 

Brice,  Arthur  Montefiore 21 

Brinkley,  Frank 28,47,48,61 

Brisse,  Andre 21,  27 

Brooks,  Sydney 15,  45 

Brown,  Arthur  Judson 39, 44 

Browne,  George  Waldo 28 

Brownell,  Clarence  Ludlow 28 

Browning,  Oscar 7 

Briiggen,  Ernst  von  der 7 

Bujac,  Jean  Leopold  Emile 7 

Bunnett,  F.  E 57 

Buret,  Maurice 47 

Bush,  H.  Fulford 27 

Busley,  C 53 

The  Bystander,  pseud 43 

Caix,  Robert  de 27, 41,  42,  43,  45 

Calchas,  ]>seii(l 42,  44,  59 

Callahan,  James  Mi  irton 49 

Camena  d' Almeida,  P 33,  37 

Campbell ,  Charles  W 35,  63 

Carles,  William  Richard 35 

Carol,  Jean 12 

Cary,  Clarence 17,  20, 21 

69 


70 


AUTHDK    INUKX 


Page 

Oassini,  Arthur,  graf 48 

Cavfiiclish,  Alfred  KcUvanl  J 35 

Cazalas 56 

Chailwick,  French  E 41 

Challaye,  Fc'-licicii 3:^ 

ChaniluTlaii),  Ba.<il  Hall 29 

Chang-Chih-tiiiifr 61 

Chariot,  Alexandre 43 

Channes,  Francis 43 

Chirol,  Valentine 12, 22, 48, 53, 56 

Cilvanet,  C 43 

Clarke,  Sir  George  Sydenham 7 

Clavedy 21 

Clews,  Henry 52 

Cobbold,  Ralph  I' 56 

Collyer,  C.  T 39 

Coloniensis,  pxemt 59 

Colquhoun,  Archibald  Ross 14, 

17, 20, 23, 24, 26, 50, 51, 56, 58, 61, 62 

Conant,  Charles  A 50, 51 

Conder,  Josiah 29 

Cooper,  John  S 52 

Cordier,  Henri 33,  62 

Couderc,  Caniille 10 

Courant,  Maurice 38 

Crawford,  John  >[artin rT  10, 17, 18 

Crosby,  Oscar  T 23 

Cro/.e,  J.  L 16 

Cuers  de  Cogolin,  Jean  de 58 

Cumniing,  Constance  F.  Gordon- .         62 

Curtis,  William  Eleroy 29 

Curzon,    George    Nathaniel,    1st 

liaron 53,  56 

Danielson,  Nikolai  Frantsovich 7 

Davey,  Richard 54 

Davidson,  James  AV 21 ,  27 

Dayton,  Edwin  AVinthrop 47 

Deasy,  Henry  Hugh  Peter 22 

Debibert,  A 21 

De  Forest,  J.  H 33 

Delage,  Eniile 7 

Delavaud,  L 10 

Delines,  Michel 10 

Denby,  C 67 

Deniker,  J 15 

Dennys,  Nicholas  B 29,  53 

Deschamps,  Philippe 8 

Desfontaines,  C 33 

Desgodins,  C.  H 22 

Des  Vceux,  William 57 

De  Windt,  Harry 12 

Dilke,  Sir  Charles  AV 50, 51, 57, 62 

Dillon,  E.  J 25,  26,  40, 42, 44, 46, 59 


Page 

Diosy,  Arthur 29 

A  Diplomat,  jiaetui 58 

Dmitrief-Mamonof,  A.  J 18 

Dole,  Nathan  Haskell   10 

Doucet,  Robert 37 

Douglas,  Robert  K 62 

Doumer,  Paul 48 

Doweling,  H.  11 24 

Drage ,  (4enff  rey S,  58 

Dramas,  P 9 

Du  Cbaylard,  G 24 

Dumnlard,  Henry 29 

Dunnell,  Mark  b' 51 

Durban,  William 20 

Durrieux,  Alcce 12 

Dye,  J.  Henry 37 

Eastman,  Samuel  C 7 

Ebren,  H 45 

Eckstein,  Gustav 33 

Edkins,  Josejih 62 

EUinwood,  Frank  F 36 

Eltzbacher,  O 33 

Emerson,  E 48 

Enselme,  Hippolyte  Marie  Joseph 

Antoine 24 

Erickson,  Hugo 52 

Ewan,  John  A 42 

Excubitor,  pseud 48 

Farges,  Louis 33 

Fassett,  J.  Sloat 38 

Fauvel,  A.  A 38 

Favier,  Alphonse 62 

Fawcett,  Waldon 20 

Flesher,  Helen  Gregory- 37 

Fontaine  de  Resbecq,  Comte  de...  44 

Fontin,  Paul 44 

Foord,  John 47,  49,  51 

Ford,  Alexander  Hume 14,21,27,46 

Ford,  Worthington  Chauncey 49, 51 

Foster,  John  W 34, 50 

Foulke,  William  Dudley 8 

Franconie,  J 32 

Eraser,  John  Foster 24 

Eraser,  Mary  Crawford 29 

Fra/.ar,  Everett 35 

Freshfield,  Douglas  W 22 

Ciale,  James  S 35 

( Jambier,  J.  W 58 

Gardner,  Christopher  Thomas 35 

Gerrare,  Wirt 12,26 

Ghercevanof,  ]Michel  Nicolaevich.  19 

Gifford,  Daniel  L 36 

( 'iles,  Herbert  Allen 62 


AUTHOR   INDEX 


1 


Page 

Gilmore,  George  W 36 

Girard  de  Rialle 10 

Glass,  J.  G.  H 62 

Golovin,  Konstantin  Fedorovkh . .  8 

Goodlet,  R 14 

Gorst,  Harold  E 63 

Gourde!,  Paul 17 

Grand-Carteret,  J 10 

Grant,  R.  W 32 

Great  Britain.     Foreign  office 17, 

22, 24, 29, 63 
Griffis,  William  Elliot. . .  29, 36, 38, 50, 51 

Grunzel,  Josef 20 

Guillemard,  F.  H.  H 14 

Gulick,  Sidney  Lewis 30 

Gundry,  R.  S 63 

Hagen,  A 39 

Hahn,  J.  P.  Armand 33 

Hamilton,  Angus 36,46 

Hamilton,  Charles  Frederick 58 

Hamm,  Margherita  Arlina 44 

Hannay,  David 46 

Hanotaux,  Gabriel 54 

Hart,  Sir  Robert,  1st  burl 63 

Hashiguchi,  Jihei 34 

Hawes,  Charles  H 12 

Hawkins,  Rush  C 52 

Hawks,  Francis  L 31 

Hearn,  Lafcadio 30 

Hedin,  Sven  Anders ■ 22 

Hellwald,  Friedrich  von 12 

Helmolt,  H.  F 30,63 

Henning,  Georg 15 

Herbertson,  A.J 42 

Herr,  Lucien. 9 

Hershey,  Amos  S 48 

Herts  let.  Sir  Edward 30,  63 

Hesse- Wartegg,  Ernst  von 63 

Heyfelder,  O 13 

Hill,  Robert  T 49 

Hillier,  Walter  C 39 

Holcombe,  Chester 63 

Hosie,  Alexander 24 

Howorth,  Henry  H 64 

Hulbert,  H.  B 36,  39 

Hunt,  J.  H 35 

Hurd,  Archibald  S 42 

lan-Ruban,  Wanda 45 

Ignotus,  ]>seud , 45 

Imbart  de  la  Tour,  Jean 59 

Inagaki,  ^lanjiro 30 

'An  Indian  Officer,'  pseud 13, 57 

Institut  colonial  international.  ...  17 


Page 

Ireland,  Alleyne 64 

I  vanovich,  p.'<eud 47 

Ivins,  W.  M.,  ;V 40 

Jack,  R.  Logan 64 

James,  Henry  Evan  Murchison...         24 

.lane,  Frederick  T 8,30,47 

Japan.     Imperial  diet 40 

Jaures,  Jean 46 

Jefferson,  Robert  L 17 

Jenings,  Foster  H 39 

John,  Griffith 61 

Johnson,  Emory  R 49 

Johnston,  CharJes 1 5, 40, 62 

Jones,  G.  H .35 

Jougla,  Gaston 46 

K.,  A .52 

Kanazawa,  S 36 

Kaneko,  Kentaro 34, 52 

Kaneko,  Kiichi 33 

Keasbey,  Lindley  Miller 49 

Khoritz 27 

Kennan,  George 34 

King,  J.  M.,  jV 51 

Kinloch,  A 21 

Kinnosuke,  Adachi .S2,  34 

Kleist,  von 26 

Knapp,  Arthur  May 42 

Koch,  W 30 

Kolossowski,  M 8 

Koto,  Bundjiro j^ 36 

Kovalevskil,    Maksim     Maksimn- 

vich 8 

Kovalevskil,  Vladimir  I  vanovich.  8 

Krafft,  Hugues 13 

Krahmer,  Gustav. 13, 17 

Kraus.«e,  Alexis 13,  .53, 64 

Kropotkin,  Petr  A 25, 46 

Kto-to 46 

Kukol- Ya.snop61sky,  L 18 

Kupchanko,  Grigoril  I  vanovich  ..  8 

La  Barre  de  Jfanteuil,  Amauryrle, 

Ixiron 54 

Labbe,  Paul 15,  17,26 

Lacoste,  H.  de  Bonillane  de 24 

Laguerie,  Villetard  de 38 

Uindor,.\rnoldHenr}' Savage..  22,36,64 

Lang,  Leonora  B 9, 10 

Lansdell,  Henry 64,65 

La  Peyre,  Jean  de 41, 45, 48 

Lariviere,  C.  de 7 

I^atimer,  Mary  Elizabeth  Worrae- 

ley 9 

Latter,  A.  M 38, 46 


72 


AUTHOR    INDEX 


Page 

I.awronce,  Thomas  J 40 

Lawrence,  .SV?-  Wultpr 23, 59 

U'bedev,  V.  T 56 

Le  Beschu,  F 21,  37, 41, 43 

I^'crnix,  Desir^ 10 

Lees,  Freflerip 41, 45 

Leger,  Louis 10 

Ijcgras,  Jules 13 

L(.'hr,  Ernest 10 

Lejeal,  G 10 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Anatole 9, 10 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Paul 42 

Lerny-Beaulieii,  Pierre 19,33,54 

I/ih- y,  Raphael  Georges 32 

Lewis,  R.  E 62 

Litman,  S 21 

Little,  Alicia  H.  N.  B 65 

Little,  Archibald  John 65 

Little,  Mrs.  Archibald.     See  Little, 
Alicia  H.  xN'.  B. 

Li-Tuyen .38 

Lnbb,  R.  Pophaui 58 

Lodge,  Henry  Cabot 9 

Lodian,  L 21 

Long,  R.  E.  C 15,20 

Longford,  Joseph  H 16,  38 

Loriii,  Henri 43 

IjOti,  Pierre.     See  Viaud,  Julien. 

Low,  A.  Maurice 15, 41 

Lowe,  Charles 54 

Lowell,  Percival 30,  36 

Loyd,  Lady  Mary 11 

Lut,«chg,  A 18 

Lynch,  George 18,  65 

Lynch,  H.  F.  B 57 

Lyons,  France.     See  Brenier,  H. 

McCormick,  Frederick 45 

Macgowaii,  J 65 

Macliat,  J 9 

Machray,  Robert 43 

Maclean,  J.  M 21 

MacQueen,  Peter 46 

Maguire,  T.  Miller 46 

Mahan,  Alfred  T 42,  46,  47,  54 

Marcillac,  Jean  de 66 

Marre,  Francis 33 

Marshall,  John 18 

Martens,  F.  de 45 

Mason,  W.  B 29 

Matignon 38 

Maurice,  Sir  F 46 

Maxey,  Edwin 23,  43,  44 

Meakin,  Annette  M.  B 13 


Merilhan,  IMaxinie  de 

Mi'ry,  Michel 

Michelsen,  Henry 

Michie,  Alexander 

Midhat,  AH  Haydar 

Mikhailoff,  M.! 

MiUukov,  Pavel  Nikolaevich 

Miller,  Henry  B 

Miller,  Joaquin 

Miln,  Louise  Jordan 

Miner,  L 

Mitford,  Algernon  Bertram  Free- 
man   

Monnier,  Marcel 

Montalbo,  Baron  de 

Montorgueil,  Georges 

Moore,  John  Bassett 

Morfill,  William  Richard 

Morris,  J 

Morse,  Edward  S 

Mumford,  John  Kiniterly 

Murray,  David 

Mury,  Francis 

Nathan,  P 

Nettancourt-Vaubecourt,  Jean  de. 

Newton,  J.  C.  C 

Niet,  pseud 

Nitobe,  Inazo  Ota 

Norman,  Henry 13,20,31,46, 

Novicow,  J 

(Edipus,  pseud 

<  )gg,  Frederic  Austin 

( )kakura,  Kakiusu 

Oktmia,  Count 

Onoto  Watanna.  -SV-c  Babcock, 
Mrs.  Winnifred  (Eaton). 

Oppert,  Ernest 

Osborn,  Chase  S 

(^ukhtomsky.  Prince  Esper.  See 
I'klitomskil,  Esper  P^sperovich, 
kniaz' . 

Ozaki,  Y 

Palmer,  Francis  H.  E 

Palmer,  Frederick 33, 

Pange,  Jean  de 

Papinot,  E 

Parker,  Edward  Harper 24, 

Parsons,  William  Barclay 

Paschkof,  Lydie 

Passy,  Frederic 

Peirce,  Herbert  H.D 

Ptoe-Siefert 

Perry,  Matthew  Calbraith 


Page 
38 
41 
20 
65 
59 
20, 62 
9 
27 
34 
36 
26 

30, 65 

37 

10 

7 

49,  51 
9 

30,  32 
30 
15 
30 

27,  45 
43 
38 
32 
9 
50 

48,54 

13,58 
46 

15,59 

28,31 
32 


36 
42 


32 

9 

42,46 

38 


25 


31 
66 
66 
10 
12 
19 
15 
31 


AUTHOR    INDEX 


73 


Page 

Petit,  Maxime 10 

Peyre,  Jean  de  la.     See  La  Peyre, 

Jean  de. 

Phillimore,  G.  G 38 

Pinon,  Ren^ 43, 66 

Poole,  Stanley  Lane- 66 

Popowski,  Jozef 57 

Potter,  Henry  Codman 50 

Pougin,  Arthur 10 

Pouvourville,  Albert  de 54 

Pownall,  C.  A.  \V 59 

Quincy,  Josiah 14 

Rabot,  Ch 10 

Raffalovich,  Arthur 10, 24 

Ragozin,  Z6naide  A 9 

Rambaud,  Alfred  Nicolas  ...  9,10,13,14 

Ransome,  Stafford 31 

Rathgen,  Karl 33 

Ravenstein,  E.  G 13 

Reclus,  Elisee 54,66 

Reclus,  On('>sime 66 

Rees,  J.  D 57 

Regelsperger,  Gustave 10 

Reich,  Eniil 15 

Reid,  Arnot 13 

Reid,  Gilbert 54,62 

Reid,  W.  C.  Jameson 15, 23, 40, 52 

Rein,  Johann  Justus 31 

Reinsch,  Paul  Samuel 50, 58 

Reith,  G.  M 67 

Rendu,  Ambroise 43 

Rijnhart,  Susie  Carson 23 

Rockhill,  William  Woodville 23 

Rosny,  J.  H .38 

Ross,  Edward  Denison 13 

Ross,  John 25 

Ruge,  Sophus 18 

Russia 10, 18 

Rustem  Bey  de  Bilinski,  A.    -See 

Bilinski,  X.  Rustem  Bey  de. 

Saint-Yves,  G 14, 58 

Salwey,  Charlotte  M 37 

Sands,  W.  F 39 

Sandwith,  M 7 

Sarachchandra  Dasa 23 

Schercr,  James  Augustin  Brown..  31 

Schierlirand,  Wolf  von 10 

Schnnfekl,  Hermann. 19 

Schultz,  Karl 42 

Scidmore,  Eliza  Ruhamah 66 

Scrutator,  jikcmI 59 

Semenov,  Petr  Petrovicli 13 

Shaw,  Albert 40 


Psge 
Shimada,  S 33 

Shoemaker,  Michael  Myers 18 

Siebold,  Alexander,  Preiherr  von..         54 

Simmerbach,  Bruno 16 

Simpson,  James  Young 18 

Singleton,  Esther 31 

Skrine,  Francis  Henry 13, 59 

Sladen,  Douglas 32 

Smith,  Arthur  H 66 

Smith,  D.  Warres 55 

Smyth,  G.  B 62 

Sniper,  pseud 26 

Solano,  E.  John 2.3,59 

Soskice,  D 9 

Speer,  Robert  E 45, 46, 55 

Stadling,  Jonas  Jonsson 14 

Stahl,  A.  F 18 

Stanley,  Henry  M 58 

Stead,  Alfred 21,26,32,37,41,44,48 

Stead,  W.  T 57 

Stevens,  Durham  White 44,  46 

Stewart,  William  R 41 

Strannik,  Ivan 10 

Stuart,  Donald 57 

T.,  H 45 

Tacchella,  P 18 

Takahira,  Kogoro 28,32,4.5,47 

Takenouchi,  Keishu 28 

Tatsuo,  Hirata 47 

Terry,  T.  Philip 37 

Thompson,  E.  R 26 

Thompson,  Herbert  M 11 

Thomson,  H.  C 66 

Thomson,  John 67 

Tikhomirov,  Lev  Aleksandrovich .         1 1 

Tison,  Alexander 34 

Tomes,  Robert 31 

Tourneux,  Maurice 10 

Townsend,  Meredith  55 

Treffel,  G 16 

Trollope,  M.  N 35 

Turley,  Robert  T 25,27 

Ukhtomskil,     Esper     Esperovich, 

htiaz' 14,59 

Ular,  Alexandre 23,26,33 

Underwood,  Mrs.  Lilliaa  Horton  ..  36 
United   States.      Bureau  of  slatis- 

lics 11,18,32,37,67 

Vachon,  Maurice 10 

Vallee,  Uon 20 

Vdmbery,  Armin 57 

Vandal,  Albert 10 

Vanderlip,  Frank  .\ 47 


74 


AUTHOR    INDKX 


Page 

Vail  Nuiinaii,  Louis  E 16 

Viaud,  Jiilien 33 

Vickei-s,  E.  II 33,43 

VilU'tanl  de  Lasn^rie,  R 37,  38 

Vladimir,  jhteud 19 

Vdgiio,  K.  M.  de 10 

Waldn,  Frank 19,47 

Wald^^teiIl,  Charles 50 

Walis/.cwski,  Kaziiuif rz 11 

Walker,  John  Brisben 15 

Wallace,  D.  Mackenzie 11 

Walton,  .Toscjih 55 

Warner,  L.  O 35 

Watson,  (iilbert 32 

Watson,  W.  Petrie 32,33 

Weale,  B.  L.  P 25 

Webster,  Harrie 37 

Wellby,  M.  S 23 

Wen  Ching 67 

Whighani,  H.  J 25,37,57 

Wicdenfeld,  Kurt 19, 20 


Page 

Wildnian,  Hounsevelle 67 

Willets,  Gilson 47 

Williams,  Frederick  Wells 49 

Williams,  S.  M 15 

Williams,  Samuel  Wells 67 

Wilson,  James  Harrison 51,62,67 

AVilson,  W.  P 49 

Wirgman,  Theodore 12 

Witte,  Sergei  Inlitch 27 

Woodbridge,  Samuel  I Gl 

Wright,  George  Frederick 14,  16,  26 

Wu  Ting-fang 49, 51, 62 

X,  Lieutenant,  pseud 45,  47 

Yorck  von  Wartenburg,  Jlaxiniil- 

ian,  Graf li 

Younghuaband,  Francis  Edward..         25 

Zabel,  Uu<lol  f 25 

Z<lsiarsky,  A.  F 18 

Zenzinoff,  B.  de 14, 15,  27,  37, 43 

Zepelin,  von 39 


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